Human Biology Division, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Molecular and Cellular Biology Graduate Program, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
mBio. 2023 Feb 28;14(1):e0311622. doi: 10.1128/mbio.03116-22. Epub 2023 Jan 4.
Chronic gastric infection with Helicobacter pylori can lead to progressive tissue changes that culminate in cancer, but how H. pylori adapts to the changing tissue environment during disease development is not fully understood. In a transgenic mouse gastric metaplasia model, we found that strains from unrelated individuals differed in their ability to infect the stomach, to colonize metaplastic glands, and to alter the expression of the metaplasia-associated protein TFF3. H. pylori isolates from different stages of disease from a single individual had differential ability to colonize healthy and metaplastic gastric glands. Exposure to the metaplastic environment selected for high gastric colonization by one of these strains. Complete genome sequencing revealed a unique alteration in the frequency of a variant allele of the putative adhesin , arising from a recombination event with the related sialic acid binding adhesin (SabA) gene. Mutation of in multiple H. pylori strain backgrounds strongly reduced adherence to both normal and metaplastic gastric tissue, and highly attenuated stomach colonization in mice. Thus, the changing gastric environment during disease development promotes bacterial adhesin gene variation associated with enhanced gastric colonization. Chronic infection with Helicobacter pylori is the primary risk factor for developing stomach cancer. As disease progresses H. pylori must adapt to a changing host tissue environment that includes induction of new cell fates in the cells that line the stomach. We tested representative H. pylori isolates collected from the same patient during early and later stages of disease in a mouse model where we can rapidly induce disease-associated tissue changes. Only the later-stage H. pylori strains could robustly colonize the diseased stomach environment. We also found that the ability to colonize the diseased stomach was associated with genetic variation in a putative cell surface adhesin gene called . Additional experiments revealed that SabB promotes binding to stomach tissue and is critical for stomach colonization by the late-stage strains. Thus, H. pylori diversifies its genome during disease progression and these genomic changes highlight critical factors for bacterial persistence.
慢性胃部幽门螺杆菌感染可导致进行性组织变化,最终导致癌症,但在疾病发展过程中,幽门螺杆菌如何适应不断变化的组织环境还不完全清楚。在一个转基因小鼠胃化生模型中,我们发现来自不同个体的菌株在感染胃、定植化生腺和改变化生相关蛋白 TFF3 表达方面的能力存在差异。来自同一个体不同疾病阶段的幽门螺杆菌分离株在定植健康和化生胃腺方面的能力存在差异。暴露于化生环境选择了其中一种菌株对高胃定植的能力。全基因组测序揭示了一种假定黏附素的变异等位基因频率的独特改变,这是由与相关唾液酸结合黏附素(SabA)基因的重组事件引起的。在多个幽门螺杆菌菌株背景中突变,强烈降低了对正常和化生胃组织的黏附能力,并显著减弱了小鼠胃定植。因此,疾病发展过程中不断变化的胃环境促进了与增强胃定植相关的细菌黏附素基因变异。慢性幽门螺杆菌感染是发展为胃癌的主要危险因素。随着疾病的进展,幽门螺杆菌必须适应不断变化的宿主组织环境,包括诱导胃衬里细胞的新细胞命运。我们在一个可以快速诱导疾病相关组织变化的小鼠模型中测试了来自同一患者在疾病早期和晚期收集的代表性幽门螺杆菌分离株。只有晚期的幽门螺杆菌菌株才能在患病的胃环境中大量定植。我们还发现,定植患病胃的能力与一个称为 的假定细胞表面黏附素基因的遗传变异有关。进一步的实验表明 SabB 促进与胃组织的结合,对于晚期菌株的胃定植至关重要。因此,幽门螺杆菌在疾病进展过程中多样化其基因组,这些基因组变化突出了细菌持续存在的关键因素。