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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, Jul 1997, 1710-1714, Vol 35, No. 7
Y Ito, T Azuma, S Ito, H Miyaji, M Hirai, Y Yamazaki, F Sato, T Kato, Y Kohli and M Kuriyama
Approximately 50% of Helicobacter pylori strains produce a cytotoxin that
is encoded by vacA and that induces vacuolation of eukaryotic cells.
Mosaicism in vacA alleles was reported, and there are three different
families of vacA signal sequences (s1a, s1b, and s2) and two different
families of middle-region alleles (m1 and m2). In addition, the vacA
genotype of a strain is associated with its cytotoxin phenotype and its
capacity to induce peptic ulceration. To clarify the strain diversity of H.
pylori in Japan, 87 Japanese clinical isolates of H. pylori (40 from
patients with chronic atrophic gastritis, 25 from patients with duodenal
ulcer, 16 from patients with gastric ulcer, 3 from patients with both
duodenal and gastric ulcers, and 3 from patients with intestinal type
gastric cancer) were characterized by vacA typing by PCR and DNA
sequencing. Eighty-four of the 87 isolates were s1a/m1, one was s1b/m1, and
two could not be typed. Moreover, all isolates in this study were cagA
positive. There were no distinct differences between the
cytotoxin-producing strains and cytotoxin- nonproducing strains within the
0.73-kb middle region. Japanese strains were highly homologous, with more
than 96% identity in this region, in which maximum divergence has been
reported. In addition, there were no associations between the specific vacA
types and the level of in vitro cytotoxin activity or the clinical
consequences. These results indicate that the cagA-positive, s1a/m1-type
strains are common in Japan, regardless of the vacA phenotype or clinical
outcome.
Copyright © 1997 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Analysis and typing of the vacA gene from cagA-positive strains of Helicobacter pylori isolated in Japan
Second Department of Internal Medicine, Fukui Medical School, Yoshida- gun, Japan.
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