Intracellular presence and genetic relationship of Helicobacter pylori within neonates' fecal yeasts and their mothers' vaginal yeasts

Author:

Yang Tingxiu123ORCID,Zhang Yuanyuan14,Zhang Hua5,Wu Xiaojuan1,Sun Jianchao1,Hua Dengxiong1,Pan Ke4,Liu Qi1,Cui Guzhen12,Chen Zhenghong12

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Microbiology and Parasitology of Education Department of Guizhou & Joint Laboratory of Helicobacter Pylori and Intestinal Microecology of Affiliated Hospital of Guizhou Medical University Guizhou Medical University Guiyang China

2. Key Laboratory of Endemic and Ethnic Diseases of Ministry of Education & Key Laboratory of Environmental Pollution Monitoring and Disease Control, Ministry of Education Guizhou Medical University Guiyang China

3. Department of Hospital Infection and Management Guizhou Provincial People's Hospital Guiyang China

4. Department of Gastroenterology People's Hospital of Qiannan Prefecture Guizhou China

5. Department of Obstetrics People's Hospital of Qiannan Prefecture Guizhou China

Abstract

AbstractHelicobacter pylori are transmissible from person to person and among family members. Mother‐to‐child transmission is the main intrafamilial route of H. pylori transmission. However, how it transmits from mother to child is still being determined. Vaginal yeast often transmits to neonates during delivery. Therefore, H. pylori hosted in yeast might follow the same transmission route. This study aimed to detect intracellular H. pylori in vaginal and fecal yeasts isolates and explore the role of yeast in H. pylori transmission. Yeast was isolated from the mothers' vaginal discharge and neonates' feces and identified by internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequencing. H. pylori 16S rRNA and antigen were detected in yeast isolates by polymerase chain reaction and direct immunofluorescence assay. Genetic relationships of Candida strains isolated from seven mothers and their corresponding neonates were determined by random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) fingerprinting and ITS alignment. The Candida isolates from four mother–neonate pairs had identical RAPD patterns and highly homologous ITS sequences. The current study showed H. pylori could be sheltered within yeast colonizing the vagina, and fecal yeast from neonates is genetically related to the vaginal yeast from their mothers. Thus, vaginal yeast presents a potential reservoir of H. pylori and plays a vital role in the transmission from mother to neonate.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Biochemistry,Bioengineering,Biotechnology

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