4.5 Article

Recombination events drives the emergence of Colombian Helicobacter pylori subpopulations with self-identity ancestry

Journal

VIRULENCE
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages 1146-1160

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/21505594.2022.2095737

Keywords

Helicobacter pylori; Colombia; population structure; ancestry; evolution; recombination

Funding

  1. Universidad del Tolima [30113, 350113, 160114, 10110, 40218, 398-2017, 851-2020]
  2. Unidad de Investigacion en Enfermedades Infecciosas, UMAE Pediatria of Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social
  3. National Cancer Institute [R01CA223978, P30CA093373]
  4. US National Institutes of Health
  5. US Auburn Community Cancer Endowed Chair in Basic Science
  6. MinCiencias [110565843382, 874-2020, 204-2015]
  7. Programa para la Formacion de Capital Humano de Alto Nivel of Tolima Department, MinCiencias [755-2016]
  8. Tolima governorate [755-2016]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

H. pylori in Colombia has evolved into subpopulations with self identity ancestry, demonstrating advanced adaptation to mixed Colombian groups. Recombination plays a more important role than punctual mutations in the genome diversity of H. pylori.
Helicobacter pylori have coevolved with mankind since its origins, adapting to different human groups. In America, H. pylori has evolved into several subpopulations. We analysed the genome of 154 Colombian strains along with 1,091 strains from worldwide populations to discern the ancestry and adaption to Colombian people. Population structure and ancestry was inferred with FineStructure and ChromoPainter. Phylogenetic relationship and the relative effect of recombination were analysing the core SNPs. Also, a Fst index was calculated to identify the gene variants with the strongest fixation in the Colombian subpopulations compared to their parent population hspSWEurope. FineStructure allowed the identification of two Colombian subpopulations, the previously described hspSWEuropeColombia and a novel subpopulation named hspColombia, that included three subgroups following their geographic origin. Colombian subpopulations represent an admixture of European, African and Indigenous ancestry; although some genomes showed a high proportion of self identity, suggesting an advanced adaption to these mestizo Colombian groups. We found that recombination is more important that punctual mutations in H. pylori genome diversity, 13.9 more important in hspSWEurope, 12.5 in hspSWEColombia and 10.5 in hspColombia, reflecting the divergence of these subpopulations. Fst analysis identified 82 SNPs fixed in 26 genes of the hspColombia subpopulation that encode for outer membrane and central metabolism proteins. Strongest fixation indexes were identified in genes encoding HofC, HopE, FrpB-4 and Sialidase A. These findings demonstrate that H. pylori has evolved in Colombia to give rise to subpopulations with a self identity ancestry, reflected in allele changes on genes encoding for outer membrane proteins.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available