Genetic diversity of the HpyC1I restriction modification system in Helicobacter pylori

  • Philippe Lehours
  • Sandrine Dupouy
  • Julien Chaineux
  • Agnès Ruskoné-Fourmestraux
  • Jean-Charles Delchier
  • Andrea Morgner
  • Francis Mégraud
  • Armelle Ménard

Abstract

Helicobacter pylori is unique because of the unusually high number and diversity of its restriction modification (R-M) systems. HpyC1I R-M was recently characterized and contains an endonuclease which is an isoschizomer of the endonuclease BccI. This R-M is involved in adherence to gastric epithelial cells, a crucial step in bacterial pathogenesis. This observation illustrates the fact that R-M systems have other putative biological functions in addition to protecting the bacterial genome from external DNA. The genomic diversity of HpyC1I R-M was evaluated more precisely on a large collection of H. pylori strains by PCR, susceptibility to BccI digestion and sequencing. The results obtained support the mechanism of gain and loss of this R-M system in the H. pylori genome, and suggest that it is an ancestral system which gradually disappears during H. pylori evolution, following successive steps: (1) inactivation of the endonuclease gene, followed or accompanied by: (2) inactivation of the methyltransferase genes, and then: (3) definitive loss, leaving only short endonuclease remnant sequences.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0923-2508
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 04.2007
Extern publiziertJa
PubMed 17346936