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Sebastian Suerbaum & Christine Josenhans

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1 Sebastian Suerbaum & Christine Josenhans
Helicobacter pylori evolution and phenotypic diversification in a changing host Sebastian Suerbaum & Christine Josenhans Asolina Braun

2 History Barry Marshall & Robin Warren, 1982 colonizes the stomach
link to gastritis and ulcers Marshall ingests H. pylori => gastritis 2005 Nobel prize „for their discovery of the bacterium H. pylori and its role in gastritis and peptic ulcer disease”

3 Clinics colonizes 50% of the world‘s population
infection during infancy via family members 5,5% of all cancer cases

4 Success Strategy extreme genetic diversity host interaction
mutagenesis recombination host interaction outstanding evation of immune system immune suppression thouthands in 1 nL no higher incidence in immunocompromised

5 Diversity extraordinary genetic heterogeneity
every infected individual harbors their own strain(s) strains change during infection high recombination events (multilocus enzyme electrophoresis data, homoplasy test)

6 Geographical Distribution
data based on multilocus sequence typing MLST set of housekeeping genes housekeeping genes not under high selective pressure none of modern strains derived from one ancestor big migration waves can be traced

7 Diversification by Mutagenesis
defect mismatch repair defect base excision repair long repetitive sequences => frameshift altered expression if located inside regulators intragenomic deletions/rearrangements mismatch repair during replication, methylated strand = ok BER alcylation, ROS, deaminated repetitions in antimutator gene => regulation of mutation by mutation last: cagA, amiA (peptidoglycan), fucosylation, LPS

8 Diversification by Recombination
recombination of short DNA fragments (~417 bp vs kbp) 50% exchange of genome in 40 years 1,111 conserved genes + ~400 frequent gene exchange seldom gene loss/gain (1 in 650 events) still some debate about numbers

9 Host Interaction BabA and SabA adhesins
bind Lewis b and sialyl-Lewis on epithelium phase-variable expression adaptation to niches, acid conditions, … geographical correlation with blood groups phase-variable => at any time some H.p. don‘t express it BabA generalists vs BabA specialist (O AmerIndians)

10 Host Interaction vacuolating cytotoxin (Vac A) LPS
vacuolation, tissue damage inhibits proliferation of T cells inhibits antigen presentation by B cells LPS Lewis antigens (on O-antigen side chains) binding of H. pylori to DCs via DC-SIGN => TH1 response diminished, ↓IL6, ↑IL10 => immune suppression heterogenous expression

11 Host Interaction flagellar motility cag PAI (a chromosome segment)
implications unknown cag PAI (a chromosome segment) type IV SS destruction of the basal membrane atrophic gastritis, peptic ulcers, adenocarcinoma (Ishikawa et al., PNAS, 2005) vaccine cagA

12 Outlook prevalence in Western countries declines vaccination (Cag A)
due to less mixed infections? due to better hygiene, antibiotics, broccoli? vaccination (Cag A)

13 Summary high prevalence of 50% extreme genetic diversity
defective mutation repair systems many repetitive regions prone to mutations many recombination events outstanding evation of immune system BabA and SabA Vac A LPS Cag PAI

14 Thank you for your attention


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