Identification of New Helicobacter pylori Subpopulations in Native Americans and Mestizos From Peru

Region-specific subpopulations have been identified. It is proposed that the hspAmerind subpopulation is being displaced from the Americans by an hpEurope population following the conquest. Our study aimed to describe the genomes and methylomes of isolates from distinct Peruvian communities: 23 stra...

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Published inFrontiers in microbiology Vol. 11; p. 601839
Main Authors Gutiérrez-Escobar, Andrés Julián, Velapatiño, Billie, Borda, Victor, Rabkin, Charles S, Tarazona-Santos, Eduardo, Cabrera, Lilia, Cok, Jaime, Hooper, Catherine C, Jahuira-Arias, Helena, Herrera, Phabiola, Noureen, Mehwish, Wang, Difei, Romero-Gallo, Judith, Tran, Bao, Peek, Jr, Richard M, Berg, Douglas E, Gilman, Robert H, Camargo, M Constanza
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 14.12.2020
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Summary:Region-specific subpopulations have been identified. It is proposed that the hspAmerind subpopulation is being displaced from the Americans by an hpEurope population following the conquest. Our study aimed to describe the genomes and methylomes of isolates from distinct Peruvian communities: 23 strains collected from three groups of Native Americans (Asháninkas [ASHA, = 9], Shimaas [SHIM, = 5] from Amazonas, and Punos from the Andean highlands [PUNO, = 9]) and 9 modern mestizos from Lima (LIM). Closed genomes and DNA modification calls were obtained using SMRT/PacBio sequencing. We performed evolutionary analyses and evaluated genomic/epigenomic differences among strain groups. We also evaluated human genome-wide data from 74 individuals from the selected Native communities (including the 23 strains donors) to compare host and bacterial backgrounds. There were varying degrees of hspAmerind ancestry in all strains, ranging from 7% in LIM to 99% in SHIM. We identified three subpopulations corresponding to each of the Native groups and a novel hspEuropePeru which evolved in the modern mestizos. The divergence of the indigenous strains recapitulated the genetic structure of Native Americans. Phylogenetic profiling showed that Orthogroups in the indigenous strains seem to have evolved differentially toward epigenomic regulation and chromosome maintenance, whereas OGs in the modern mestizo (LIM) seem to have evolved toward virulence and adherence. The prevalence of / genotype was similar across populations ( = 0.32): 89% in ASHA, 67% in PUNO, 56% in LIM and 40% in SHIM. Both and sequences showed that LIM strains were genetically differentiated ( < 0.001) as compared to indigenous strains. We identified 642 R-M systems with 39% of the associated genes located in the core genome. We found 692 methylation motifs, including 254 population-specific sequences not previously described. In Peru, hspAmerind is not extinct, with traces found even in a heavily admixed mestizo population. Notably, our study identified three new hspAmerind subpopulations, one per Native group; and a new subpopulation among mestizos that we named hspEuropePeru. This subpopulation seems to have more virulence-related elements than hspAmerind. Purifying selection driven by variable host immune response may have shaped the evolution of Peruvian subpopulations, potentially impacting disease outcomes.
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Edited by: Frank T. Robb, University of Maryland, Baltimore, United States
Reviewed by: Bodo Linz, Friedrich Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany; Nagendran Tharmalingam, Rhode Island Hospital, United States
This article was submitted to Evolutionary and Genomic Microbiology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Microbiology
ISSN:1664-302X
1664-302X
DOI:10.3389/fmicb.2020.601839