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Evidence for a primate origin of zoonotic Helicobacter suis colonizing domesticated pigs

Authors :
Flahou, Bram
Rossi, Mirko
Bakker, Jaco
Langermans, Jan AM
Heuvelman, Edwin
Solnick, Jay V
Martin, Miriam E
O’Rourke, Jani
Ngoan, Le Duc
Hoa, Nguyen Xuan
Nakamura, Masahiko
Øverby, Anders
Matsui, Hidenori
Ota, Hiroyoshi
Matsumoto, Takehisa
Foss, Dennis L
Kopta, Laurice A
Omotosho, Oladipo
Franciosini, Maria Pia
Casagrande Proietti, Patrizia
Guo, Aizhen
Liu, Han
Borilova, Gabriela
Bracarense, Ana Paula
Lindén, Sara K
De Bruyckere, Sofie
Zhang, Guangzhi
De Witte, Chloë
Smet, Annemieke
Pasmans, Frank
Ducatelle, Richard
Corander, Jukka
Haesebrouck, Freddy
Source :
The ISME Journal; January 2018, Vol. 12 Issue: 1 p77-86, 10p
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Helicobacter suis is the second most prevalent Helicobacter species in the stomach of humans suffering from gastric disease. This bacterium mainly inhabits the stomach of domesticated pigs, in which it causes gastric disease, but it appears to be absent in wild boars. Interestingly, it also colonizes the stomach of asymptomatic rhesus and cynomolgus monkeys. The origin of modern human-, pig- or non-human primate-associated H. suis strains in these respective host populations was hitherto unknown. Here we show that H. suis in pigs possibly originates from non-human primates. Our data suggest that a host jump from macaques to pigs happened between 100 000 and 15 000 years ago and that pig domestication has had a significant impact on the spread of H. suis in the pig population, from where this pathogen occasionally infects humans. Thus, in contrast to our expectations, H. suis appears to have evolved in its main host in a completely different way than its close relative Helicobacter pylori in humans.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17517362 and 17517370
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
The ISME Journal
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs44272106
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/ismej.2017.145