A 500-year tale of co-evolution, adaptation, and virulence: Helicobacter pylori in the Americas

Author:

Muñoz-Ramirez Zilia Y.ORCID,Pascoe BenORCID,Mendez-Tenorio AlfonsoORCID,Mourkas EvangelosORCID,Sandoval-Motta Santiago,Perez-Perez Guillermo,Morgan Douglas R.,Dominguez Ricardo Leonel,Ortiz-Princz DianaORCID,Cavazza Maria Eugenia,Rocha GifoneORCID,Queiroz Dulcienne M. M.,Catalano Mariana,Palma Gerardo Zerbetto De,Goldman Cinthia G.ORCID,Venegas Alejandro,Alarcon Teresa,Oleastro MonicaORCID,Vale Filipa F.,Goodman Karen J.ORCID,Torres Roberto C.ORCID,Berthenet Elvire,Hitchings Matthew D.ORCID,Blaser Martin J.ORCID,Sheppard Samuel K.,Thorell KaisaORCID,Torres JavierORCID

Abstract

AbstractHelicobacter pylori is a common component of the human stomach microbiota, possibly dating back to the speciation of Homo sapiens. A history of pathogen evolution in allopatry has led to the development of genetically distinct H. pylori subpopulations, associated with different human populations, and more recent admixture among H. pylori subpopulations can provide information about human migrations. However, little is known about the degree to which some H. pylori genes are conserved in the face of admixture, potentially indicating host adaptation, or how virulence genes spread among different populations. We analyzed H. pylori genomes from 14 countries in the Americas, strains from the Iberian Peninsula, and public genomes from Europe, Africa, and Asia, to investigate how admixture varies across different regions and gene families. Whole-genome analyses of 723 H. pylori strains from around the world showed evidence of frequent admixture in the American strains with a complex mosaic of contributions from H. pylori populations originating in the Americas as well as other continents. Despite the complex admixture, distinctive genomic fingerprints were identified for each region, revealing novel American H. pylori subpopulations. A pan-genome Fst analysis showed that variation in virulence genes had the strongest fixation in America, compared with non-American populations, and that much of the variation constituted non-synonymous substitutions in functional domains. Network analyses suggest that these virulence genes have followed unique evolutionary paths in the American populations, spreading into different genetic backgrounds, potentially contributing to the high risk of gastric cancer in the region.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Microbiology

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