Campylobacter jejuni genotypes are associated with post-infection irritable bowel syndrome in humans

Author:

Peters StephanieORCID,Pascoe BenORCID,Wu ZuoweiORCID,Bayliss Sion C.,Zeng Ximin,Edwinson Adam,Veerabadhran-Gurunathan Sakteesh,Jawahir Selina,Calland Jessica K.,Mourkas Evangelos,Patel Robin,Wiens Terra,Decuir Marijke,Boxrud David,Smith Kirk,Parker Craig T.,Farrugia GianricoORCID,Zhang Qijing,Sheppard Samuel K.,Grover MadhusudanORCID

Abstract

AbstractCampylobacter enterocolitis may lead to post-infection irritable bowel syndrome (PI-IBS) and while some C. jejuni strains are more likely than others to cause human disease, genomic and virulence characteristics promoting PI-IBS development remain uncharacterized. We combined pangenome-wide association studies and phenotypic assays to compare C. jejuni isolates from patients who developed PI-IBS with those who did not. We show that variation in bacterial stress response (Cj0145_phoX), adhesion protein (Cj0628_CapA), and core biosynthetic pathway genes (biotin: Cj0308_bioD; purine: Cj0514_purQ; isoprenoid: Cj0894c_ispH) were associated with PI-IBS development. In vitro assays demonstrated greater adhesion, invasion, IL-8 and TNFα secretion on colonocytes with PI-IBS compared to PI-no-IBS strains. A risk-score for PI-IBS development was generated using 22 genomic markers, four of which were from Cj1631c, a putative heme oxidase gene linked to virulence. Our finding that specific Campylobacter genotypes confer greater in vitro virulence and increased risk of PI-IBS has potential to improve understanding of the complex host-pathogen interactions underlying this condition.

Funder

RCUK | Medical Research Council

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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