Age of the association between Helicobacter pylori and man

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Authors

Moodley, Yoshan
Linz, Bodo
Bond, Robert P.
Nieuwoudt, Martin J.
Soodyall, Himla
Schlebusch, Carina M.
Bernhoft, Steffi
Hale, James
Suerbaum, Sebastian
Mugisha, Lawrence

Journal Title

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Volume Title

Publisher

Public Library of Science

Abstract

When modern humans left Africa ca. 60,000 years ago (60 kya), they were already infected with Helicobacter pylori, and these bacteria have subsequently diversified in parallel with their human hosts. But how long were humans infected by H. pylori prior to the out-of-Africa event? Did this co-evolution predate the emergence of modern humans, spanning the species divide? To answer these questions, we investigated the diversity of H. pylori in Africa, where both humans and H. pylori originated. Three distinct H. pylori populations are native to Africa: hpNEAfrica in Afro-Asiatic and Nilo-Saharan speakers, hpAfrica1 in Niger-Congo speakers and hpAfrica2 in South Africa. Rather than representing a sustained co-evolution over millions of years, we find that the coalescent for all H. pylori plus its closest relative H. acinonychis dates to 88–116 kya. At that time the phylogeny split into two primary super-lineages, one of which is associated with the former hunter-gatherers in southern Africa known as the San. H. acinonychis, which infects large felines, resulted from a later host jump from the San, 43–56 kya. These dating estimates, together with striking phylogenetic and quantitative human-bacterial similarities show that H. pylori is approximately as old as are anatomically modern humans. They also suggest that H. pylori may have been acquired via a single host jump from an unknown, non-human host. We also find evidence for a second Out of Africa migration in the last 52,000 years, because hpEurope is a hybrid population between hpAsia2 and hpNEAfrica, the latter of which arose in northeast Africa 36–52 kya, after the Out of Africa migrations around 60 kya.

Description

Table S1 Mitochondrial DNA haplotypes, number of H. pylori cultures and unique H. pylori haplotypes per individual.
Table S2 Primers designed from a whole genome alignment and used to amplify and sequence the 7 homologous housekeeping gene (MLST) fragments in Helicobacter cetorum.
Table S3 H. pylori sequences used in Mantel regressions.
Table S4 Source of human mitochondrial DNA sequences used in Mantel regressions.
Text S1 Treefinder script to generate confidence limits from the spread of posterior IMA t values.

Keywords

Humans, Africa, Helicobacter pylori, Diversity

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Moodley, Y., Linz, B., Bond, R.P., Nieuwoudt, M., Soodyall, H. et al. (2012) Age of the Association between Helicobacter pylori and Man. PLoS Pathogens 8(5): e1002693. DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1002693.