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Repeated out-of-Africa expansions of Helicobacter pylori driven by replacement of deleterious mutations

Authors :
Saeid Latifi-Navid
Lars Agréus
Daniel Falush
Kaisa Thorell
Yoshio Yamaoka
Harry A. Thorpe
Beatriz Martinez-Gonzalez
Mónica Oleastro
Lars Engstrand
Timokratis Karamitros
Jukka Ronkainen
Filipa F. Vale
Sebastian Suerbaum
Koji Yahara
TsachiTsadok Perets
Elise Tourrette
Pertti Aro
Ben Pascoe
Wael El-Amin
Ioannis Karayiannis
Samuel K. Sheppard
Siqi Liu
Dionyssios N. Sgouras
Teresa Alarcón
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

All genomes mutate but the consequences of the resulting deleterious mutational load are poorly understood. Helicobacter pylori lives in the human stomach, has a higher mutation rate than most bacteria and has accompanied anatomically modern humans in migrations including the out-of-Africa expansion more than 50,000 years ago. H. pylori from East Asia have accumulated at least 500 more non-synonymous mutations than African strains, which we propose is due to reduced efficacy of selection during the out-of-Africa bottleneck. H. pylori from Europe and the Middle East trace a substantially higher fraction of ancestry from modern African populations than the humans that carry them, which we find is due to at least three separate admixture events. African ancestry is elevated at positions in the genome where non-synonymous mutations are at high frequency in Asia. We propose that this is due to replacement of deleterious mutations that accumulated during the bottleneck, with the high overall African ancestry proportion due to clonal expansion of strains of African origin. We use simulations to show that a Muller9s ratchet like effect can lead to long-term segregation of deleterious mutations within bacterial populations after a bottleneck, despite high rates of homologous recombination, but that population fitness can be restored by migration of small numbers of bacteria from non-bottlenecked populations. Our results demonstrate that population bottlenecks can have long-term genomic and demographic consequences, even in species with enormous population sizes.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........9767562c03a2f93e23c4088d6bd3d7a8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.06.05.447065