Affiliation:
1. State Key Laboratory for Infectious Disease Prevention and Control, and National Institute for Communicable Disease Control and Prevention, China CDC, Beijing, PR China
2. Collaborative Innovation Center for Diagnosis and Treatment of Infectious Diseases, Beijing, PR China
3. Department of Food Hygiene and Environmental Health, Helsinki University, Finland
Abstract
A Gram-stain-negative, microaerophilic strain, 80(YS1)T, with a spiral-shaped morphology and 1–2 sheathed flagella at each end of the cells was isolated from the gastric mucosa of Marmota himalayana, the animal reservoir of
Yersinia pestis
in China, on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. The strain grew at 30, 35 and 42 °C, but not at 25 °C. Growth was in the form of a thinly spreading film on brain heart infusion agar containing 8 % sheep blood under microaerobic conditions. The strain did not hydrolyse urea or hippurate, and did not grow on media containing 1 % glycine. It reduced nitrate to nitrite, and was catalase- and alkaline-phosphatase-positive, susceptible to nalidixic acid and resistant to cefalotin. It was positive for genus-specific PCR for the genus
Helicobacter
, but could not be classified to any recognized species according biochemical tests results. Therefore, a phylogenetic study based on 16S rRNA, 23S rRNA, 60 kDa heat-shock protein (hsp60) and gyrase subunit B (gyrB) genes was conducted. The 16S rRNA gene sequence (1468 bp) analysis showed that strain 80(YS1)T was most closely related to
Helicobacter marmotae
(96.7 % similarity). The 23S rRNA gene sequence (2879 bp) analysis showed that the strain was most closely related to
Helicobacter canis
(96 % similarity). The complete gyrB gene sequence (2325 bp) analysis showed that it was related phylogenetically to
Helicobacter cinaedi
(79.4 % similarity) and
H. marmotae
(79.1 % similarity). Analysis of the partial sequence of the hsp60 gene of strain 80(YS1)T showed closest similarity to the sequences of
Helicobacter equorum
(82 %) and
H. cinaedi
(81 %), respectively. However, there was no hsp60 sequence of
H. marmotae
available for analysis. The data of morphological, biochemical and phylogenetic characteristics all supported that this strain represents a novel species. The name Helicobacter himalayensis sp. nov. is proposed for this novel species with the type strain 80(YS1)T ( = CGMCC 1.12864T = DSM 28742T)
Funder
Ministry of Science and Technology, People’s Republic of China
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Subject
General Medicine,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Microbiology
Cited by
19 articles.
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