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Research Project
CeLac and European consortium for a personalized medicine approach to Gastric Cancer
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Publications
The Helicobacter pylori Genome Project: insights into H. pylori population structure from analysis of a worldwide collection of complete genomes
Publication . Thorell, Kaisa; Muñoz-Ramírez, Zilia Y.; Wang, Difei; Sandoval-Motta, Santiago; Boscolo Agostini, Rajiv; Ghirotto, Silvia; Torres, Roberto C.; HpGP Research Network; Falush, Daniel; Camargo, M. Constanza; Rabkin, Charles S.
Helicobacter pylori, a dominant member of the gastric microbiota, shares coevolutionary
history with humans. This has led to the development of
genetically distinct H. pylori subpopulations associated with the geographic
origin of the host and with differential gastric disease risk. Here, we provide
insights into H. pylori population structure as a part of the Helicobacter pylori
Genome Project (HpGP), a multi-disciplinary initiative aimed at elucidating H.
pylori pathogenesis and identifying new therapeutic targets. We collected 1011
well-characterized clinical strains from 50 countries and generated highquality
genome sequences. We analysed core genome diversity and population
structure of the HpGP dataset and 255 worldwide reference genomes to
outline the ancestral contribution to Eurasian, African, and American populations.
We found evidence of substantial contribution of population hpNorthAsia
and subpopulation hspUral in Northern European H. pylori. The
genomes of H. pylori isolated from northern and southern Indigenous Americans
differed in that bacteria isolated in northern Indigenous communities
were more similar to North Asian H. pylori while the southern had higher
relatedness to hpEastAsia. Notably, we also found a highly clonal yet geographically
dispersed North American subpopulation, which is negative for the
cag pathogenicity island, and present in 7% of sequenced US genomes. We
expect the HpGP dataset and the corresponding strains to become a major
asset for H. pylori genomics.
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Funding agency
European Commission
Funding programme
H2020
Funding Award Number
825832
