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Characterization of East-Asian Helicobacter pylori encoding Western EPIYA-ABC CagA

Authors
 Kavinda Tissera  ;  Myeong-A Kim  ;  Jing Lai  ;  Sacheera Angulmaduwa  ;  Aeryun Kim  ;  D Scott Merrell  ;  Ji-Hye Kim  ;  Hanfu Su  ;  Jeong-Heon Cha 
Citation
 JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY, Vol.60(2) : 207-214, 2022-02 
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY
ISSN
 1225-8873 
Issue Date
2022-02
MeSH
Amino Acid Motifs* ; Antigens, Bacterial / genetics* ; Bacterial Proteins / genetics* ; Bacterial Typing Techniques / methods ; DNA, Bacterial ; Far East ; Genome, Bacterial ; Genotype ; Helicobacter Infections / microbiology ; Helicobacter pylori / classification* ; Helicobacter pylori / genetics* ; Helicobacter pylori / metabolism ; Humans ; Phylogeny ; Polymorphism, Genetic ; Republic of Korea ; Virulence Factors / genetics*
Keywords
EPIYA-C motif ; Helicobacter pylori ; cagA ; geographic diversity ; polymorphism
Abstract
The polymorphic bacterial oncoprotein, CagA shows geography-dependent variation in the C-terminal Glu-Pro-Ile-Tyr-Ala (EPIYA) motifs; East-Asian H. pylori isolates carry the ABD type while Western isolates carry the ABC type. In Western isolates, the EPIYA-C motif is sometimes found in multi-copy and this genotype is associated with disease severity. Interestingly, a small number of East-Asian H. pylori isolates have been found to carry Western ABC-type CagA. To gain a better understanding of these unusual isolates, the genomes of four Korean H. pylori clinical isolates carrying ABC-type CagA were sequenced via third generation (Pac-Bio SMRT) sequencing technology. The obtained data were utilized for phylogenetic analysis as well as comparison of additional virulence factors that are known to show geographic-dependent polymorphisms. Three of four isolates indeed belonged to the hpEastAsia group and showed typical East-Asian polymorphism in virulence factors such as homA/B/C, babA/B/C, and oipA. One isolate grouped to HpAfrica and showed typical Western polymorphism of virulence factors such as cagA, homA/B/C, and oipA. To understand the occurrence of the multi-copy EPIYA-C motif genotype in an East-Asian H. pylori background, the Korean clinical isolate, K154 was analyzed; this strain belonged to hpEastAsia but encoded CagA EPIYA-ABCCCC. Based on DNA sequence homology within the CagA multimerization (CM) sequence that flanked the EPIYA-C motifs, we predicted that the number of C motifs might change via homologous recombination. To test this hypothesis, K154 was cultured for one generation and 287 single colonies were analyzed for the number of EPIYA-C motifs using PCR-based screening and DNA sequencing verification. Three out of 284 (1%) single colony isolates showed changes in the number of EPIYA-C motifs in vitro; one isolate increased to five EPIYA-C motifs, one decreased to three EPIYA-C motifs, and one completely deleted the EPIYA-C motifs. The capacity for dynamic changes in the number of EPIYA-C repeats of CagA may play a role in generating important intraspecies diversity in East-Asian H. pylori.
Full Text
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12275-022-1483-7
DOI
10.1007/s12275-022-1483-7
Appears in Collections:
2. College of Dentistry (치과대학) > Dept. of Oral Biology (구강생물학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Cha, Jeong Heon(차정헌) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9385-2653
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/188813
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