Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Journal of Clinical Microbiology, December 1998, p. 3710-3712, Vol. 36, No. 12
Laboratory of Enteric Pathogens,
Received 5 May 1998/Returned for modification 6 July 1998/Accepted 23 September 1998
Helicobacter pylori urease subunit genes in 383 isolates from 10 countries were investigated by PCR-restriction
fragment length polymorphism (HaeIII) analysis. Eighty-two
different ureAB profiles were documented by reference to
known sequences. Variation among 51% of strains was accounted for by
10 predominant patterns, which provided a unique framework for
categorizing isolates with geographically diverse origins.
Helicobacter pylori
is the causative agent worldwide of chronic gastritis and is a
significant risk factor in the development of peptic ulceration and
gastric cancer (5). Intense urease activity is a key
pathogenicity factor (12), and in urease, the first genomic
region to be sequenced, genes are highly conserved (2, 13,
28). Because DNA restriction digest analysis of isolates from
different patients indicates a high level of intragenic diversity, the
approach has been applied widely for genotyping (1, 2, 6, 7, 10,
15, 17, 18, 23-27). In view of the importance of urease as
a candidate vaccine (14) and as a target for PCR
specific-detection assays (15, 19), we have developed
a scheme for indexing ureAB variation to facilitate identification of clinical isolates.
The 383 isolates of H. pylori were collected between
1992 and 1997 from gastric or duodenal biopsy tissue taken during
routine endoscopy of patients presenting with symptoms of
dyspepsia (10, 11, 18) or from the gastric juice
of healthy volunteers (21). Three reference cultures (NCTC
11637, NCTC 11638, and NCTC 12455 strain 26695) were included. Isolates
were mostly from United Kingdom (n = 323), but strains
from nine other countries (Australia [3 isolates], Canada [8
isolates], China [1 isolate], Italy [4 isolates], Nigeria [7
isolates], Peru [2 isolates], South Africa [4 isolates], Turkey
[26 isolates] and the United States [5 isolates]) were also
included in the study to determine geographical diversity. Strains were cultured on 10% (vol/vol) Columbia blood agar at 37°C in a variable atmosphere incubator (Don Whitley Scientific Ltd.,
Shipley, United Kingdom) under microaerobic conditions (5% O2, 5% CO2, 2% H2, and 88%
N2) and preserved at The 2.41-kb ureAB amplicon was obtained from all 383 isolates of H. pylori. A total of 82 ureAB
HaeIII RFLP patterns were defined and designated by a
ureAB (uAB) profile number (uAB1 to uAB82). Examples of
typical profiles are shown elsewhere (18). About 18% of the
strains had unique uAB profiles, but the 10 most common profiles (Table
1) accounted for about 51% of strains. Profile descriptions were based
on 17 fragments of
0095-1137/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Development of a Scheme for Genotyping
Helicobacter pylori Based on Allelic Variation in Urease
Subunit Genes
![]()
ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Text
References
![]()
TEXT
Top
Abstract
Text
References
196°C. Genomic DNA was extracted,
the ureAB region was amplified, and restriction fragment
length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis was performed as described
previously (11, 18, 23). DNA fragment sizes were estimated
from migration distances by using polynomial curve-fitting functions
(16). Profiles were recorded in Microsoft Excel as derived
fragment sizes (in base pairs) and analyzed as numerical strings
according to their positions in the amplicon (Table
1). A novel Visual Basic macro (details
are available from the corresponding author) was written to calculate
genotype frequencies and to search for matches and partial matches with
existing database profiles (9).
TABLE 1.
Details of the 10 most common H. pylori
ureAB profiles
1,578 bp. The 515-bp fragment was conserved, but a
scheme using seven diagnostic signature fragments for the rapid
identification of the main profiles was devised (Table
2). The precise size and order of
fragments in each profile were determined by using the known locations
of HaeIII sites in linear maps of three previously reported
ureAB sequences (3, 13, 28). NCTC 12455 (strain
26695) had profile uAB3, which was in accord with the HaeIII
digest fragments predicted from the genome sequence (28).
The estimated locations of the genetic events involving
HaeIII sites are listed in Table
3. Pattern uAB1 was selected as the core
pattern, as it was the most frequent and gave rise to the other
common patterns by a series of single or double mutations. The 315-bp
region at the 5' end of ureA and the 515-bp region at the 3'
end of ureB were highly conserved, whereas most
variation occurred in the middle region of ureB. An analysis
of strains representing the 10 common types indicated that
ureAB profiling was more discriminatory than ureC (HhaI) and ureC (MboI) profiling but
marginally less discriminatory than combined ureC
(HhaI-MboI) profiling (25).
Although ureC (revised designation, glmM) is used
for genotyping, its main role is now recognized to be related to
cell wall synthesis and not to urease activity (4).
TABLE 2.
Signature bands for rapid identification of the main
H. pylori ureAB profiles
TABLE 3.
Analysis of genetic events within the
ureAB operon of H. pylori
Our results confirm and extend the findings of previous studies showing considerable diversity in the ureAB region of H. pylori isolated from different individuals (2, 18). All strains produced functionally highly active urease, and mutations within the subunit genes were synonymous for the three sequenced strains. The effect of such variations on urease antigenicity is unknown but may be of practical significance when considering the effectiveness of urease-based vaccines in diverse and heterogeneous human populations.
A novel finding was that about half the strains were represented by just 10 ureAB RFLP profiles, which indicated a higher degree of conservation than expected. Furthermore, H. pylori with the same urease profile infected unrelated individuals, and in some cases, isolates were from widely separated parts of the world. Although it is generally believed that a large and very genetically diverse population of H. pylori circulates in the community, certain genomic markers, such as cagA and vacAs1, are widely distributed and partially conserved (8, 22), and it would appear that this is also true for certain ureAB polymorphisms. Further evidence of this conservation was apparent from published data on strains isolated in the United States showing profiles closely matching uAB3 and uAB5 (6). The availability of H. pylori urease gene sequences enabled precise sizes to be assigned to each RFLP profile and an exact genomic location to be identified. This novel development of RFLP analysis has considerable potential for studying allelic variation in other regions of the H. pylori genome, such as the highly polymorphic vacA locus (22).
In conclusion, we found that HaeIII RFLP analysis was an easy-to-perform, reproducible, and discriminatory means of documenting diversity within the H. pylori ureAB operon. Furthermore, differences were independent of variation in other loci associated with pathogenicity, such as cagA, vacA, 48-kDa HtrA, and 26-kDa antigen genes, although analysis of such loci with multiple restriction enzymes could be applied to further discriminate strains when necessary (2, 20). The scheme was developed mainly on U.K. isolates of H. pylori, but it appears to be equally applicable to isolates from other parts of the world and thus provides a practical general purpose genotyping framework to facilitate interlaboratory comparability.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank the various collaborators for providing isolates.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Helicobacter Reference Unit, Laboratory of Enteric Pathogens, Central Public Health Laboratory, 61 Colindale Ave., London NW9 5HT, United Kingdom. Phone: (44) 0181 200 4400 ext. 3740. Fax: (44) 0181 905 9929. E-mail: rowen{at}phls.co.uk
| |
REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| 1. | Campbell, S., A. Fraser, B. Holliss, J. Schmid, and P. W. O'Toole. 1997. Evidence for ethnic tropism of Helicobacter pylori. Infect. Immun. 65:3708-3712[Abstract]. |
| 2. |
Clayton, C. L.,
H. Kleanthous,
D. D. Morgan,
L. Puckley, and S. Tabaqchali.
1993.
Rapid fingerprinting of Helicobacter pylori by polymerase chain reaction and restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis.
J. Clin. Microbiol.
31:1420-1425 |
| 3. |
Clayton, C. L.,
M. J. Pallen,
H. Kleanthous,
B. W. Wren, and S. Tabaqchali.
1990.
Nucleotide sequence of two genes from Helicobacter pylori encoding for urease subunits.
Nucleic Acids Res.
18:362 |
| 4. |
de Reuse, H.,
A. Labigne, and D. Mengin-Lecreulx.
1997.
The Helicobacter pylori ureC gene codes for a phosphoglucosamine mutase.
J. Bacteriol.
179:3488-3493 |
| 5. | Dunn, B. E., H. Cohen, and M. J. Blaser. 1997. Helicobacter pylori. Clin. Microbiol. Rev. 10:720-741[Abstract]. |
| 6. |
Foxall, P. A.,
L.-T. Hu, and H. L. T. Mobley.
1992.
Use of polymerase chain reaction-amplified Helicobacter pylori urease structural genes for differentiation of isolates.
J. Clin. Microbiol.
30:739-741 |
| 7. |
Fujimoto, S.,
B. Marshall, and M. J. Blaser.
1994.
PCR-based restriction fragment length polymorphism typing of Helicobacter pylori.
J. Clin. Microbiol.
32:331-334 |
| 8. |
Ge, Z., and D. E. Taylor.
1998.
Helicobacter pylori: molecular genetics and diagnostic typing.
Br. Med. Bull.
54:31-38 |
| 9. | Grant, A. Unpublished data. |
| 10. | Hurtado, A., and R. J. Owen. 1993. Urease gene polymorphisms in Helicobacter pylori from family members. Med. Microbiol. Lett. 2:386-393. |
| 11. | Hurtado, A., and R. J. Owen. 1994. Identification of mixed genotypes in Helicobacter pylori from gastric biopsy tissue by analysis of urease gene polymorphisms. FEMS Med. Microbiol. Immunol. 8:307-314. |
| 12. | Labigne, A., and H. de Reuse. 1996. Determinants of Helicobacter pylori pathogenicity. Infect. Agents Dis. 5:191-202[Medline]. |
| 13. | Labigne, A., V. Cussac, and P. Courcoux. 1991. Shuttle cloning and nucleotide sequences of Helicobacter pylori genes responsible for urease activity. J. Bacteriol. 73:1920-1931. |
| 14. | Lee, A., and F. Buck. 1996. Vaccination and mucosal responses to Helicobacter pylori infection. Aliment. Pharmacol. Ther. 10(Suppl. 1):129-138. |
| 15. | Li, C., T. Ha, D. S. Chi, D. A. Ferguson, Jr., C. Jiang, J. J. Laffan, and E. Thomas. 1997. Differentiation of Helicobacter pylori strains directly from gastric biopsy specimens by PCR-based restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis without culture. J. Clin. Microbiol. 35:3021-3025[Abstract]. |
| 16. |
Lorenz, E.,
S. Leeton, and R. J. Owen.
1997.
A simple method for sizing large fragments of bacterial DNA separated by PFGE.
CABIOS
13:485-486 |
| 17. |
Moore, R. A.,
A. Kureishi,
S. Wong, and L. E. Bryan.
1993.
Categorization of clinical isolates of Helicobacter pylori on the basis of restriction digest analyses of polymerase chain reaction-amplified ureC genes.
J. Clin. Microbiol.
31:1334-1335 |
| 18. |
Owen, R. J.,
J. Bickley,
A. Hurtado,
A. Fraser, and R. E. Pounder.
1994.
Comparison of PCR-based restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis of urease genes with rRNA gene profiling for monitoring Helicobacter pylori infections in patients on triple therapy.
J. Clin. Microbiol.
32:1203-1210 |
| 19. | Owen, R. J., and J. R. Gibson. 1998. Detection and typing of Helicobacter pylori, p. 419-430. In N. Woodford, and A. P. Johnson (ed.), Molecular approaches for the diagnosis and investigation of bacterial diseases. Humana Press, Totowa, N.J. |
| 20. | Owen, R. J., E. Slater, J. Gibson, and E. Lorenz. 1997. Grouping of DU-associated Helicobacter pylori based on variation in multiple independent pathogenicity markers. Ir. J. Med. Sci. 166(Suppl. 3):52. |
| 21. | Owen, R. J., M. Williams, A. J. Lawson, and R. E. Pounder. 1997. Culturing Helicobacter pylori from gastric aspirates of healthy volunteers are unchanged during dosing with omeprazole. Gut 41(Suppl. 1):A9. |
| 22. | Peters, T., R. J. Owen, and L. Teare. 1998. Helicobacter pylori with identical vacA genotypes and subtypes are associated with a variety of gastric pathologies in dyspeptic patients from one geographical area. Gut 43(Suppl. 2):A20. |
| 23. | Romero-Lopez, C., R. J. Owen, and M. Desai. 1993. Differentiation between isolates of Helicobacter pylori by PCR-RFLP analysis of urease A and B genes and comparison with ribosomal RNA gene patterns. FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 110:37-44[Medline]. |
| 24. | Shortridge, V. D., G. G. Stone, R. K. Flamm, J. Beyer, J. Versalovic, D. W. Graham, and S. K. Tanaka. 1997. Molecular typing of Helicobacter pylori isolates from a multicenter U.S. clinical trial by ureC restriction fragment length polymorphism. J. Clin. Microbiol. 35:471-473[Abstract]. |
| 25. | Slater, E. Unpublished data. |
| 26. | Stone, G. G., D. Shortridge, R. K. Flamm, J. Beyer, D. Stamler, and S. K. Tanaka. 1997. PCR-RFLP typing of ureC from Helicobacter pylori isolated in Argentina from gastric biopsies before and after treatment with clarithromycin. Epidemiol. Infect. 118:119-124[Medline]. |
| 27. |
Stone, G. G.,
D. Shortridge,
R. K. Flamm,
J. Beyer,
A. T. Ghoneim, and S. K. Tanaka.
1997.
PCR-RFLP typing of ureC from Helicobacter pylori isolated from gastric biopsies during a European multi-country clinical trial.
J. Antimicrob. Chemother.
40:251-256 |
| 28. | Tombs, J.-F., O. White, A. R. Kerlavage, R. A. Clayton, G. G. Sutton, R. D. Fleischmann, K. A. Ketxhum, H. P. Klenk, S. Gill, B. A. Dougherty, K. Nelson, J. Quackenbush, L. Zhou, E. F. Kirkness, S. Peterson, B. Loftus, D. Richardson, R. Dodson, H. G. Khalak, A. Glodek, K. McKenny, L. M. Fitzgerald, N. Lee, M. D. Adams, E. K. Hickey, D. E. Berg, J. D. Gocayne, T. R. Utterback, J. D. Peterson, J. M. Kelley, M. D. Cotton, J. M. Weidman, C. Bowman, L. Watthey, E. Wallin, W. S. Hayes, M. Borodovsky, P. D. Karp, H. O. Smith, C. M. Fraser, and J. C. Venter. 1997. The complete genome sequence of the gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori. Nature 388:539-547[Medline]. |
This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»