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Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
Natural Variation in Populations of Persistently Colonizing Bacteria Affect Human Host Cell Phenotype
Ist Teil von
  • The Journal of infectious diseases, 2003-08, Vol.188 (4), p.486-496
Ort / Verlag
Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press
Erscheinungsjahr
2003
Link zum Volltext
Quelle
Oxford Journals 2020 Medicine
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • The highly diverse bacterium Helicobacter pylori which persistently colonizes the human stomach, provides models to study the role of genome plasticity in host adaptation. Within H. pylori populations from 2 colonized individuals, intragenomic recombination between cagA DNA repeat sequences leads to deletion or duplication of tyrosine phosphorylation sites in the CagA protein, which is injected by a type IV secretion system into host cells. Experimental coculture of gastric epithelial cells with the strains containing these naturally occurring CagA phosphorylation site variants induced markedly divergent host cell morphologic responses. Mutants were constructed in which a phosphorylation site was either added or deleted in the expressed CagA protein; coculture studies confirmed that the naturally occurring differences in CagA phosphorylation are responsible for the observed phenotypic variation. These findings indicate that within an individual host, intragenomic recombination between H. pylori repetitive DNA produces strain variants differing in their signals to host cells

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