An African origin for the intimate association between humans and Helicobacter pylori

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Linz, Bodo
Balloux, Francois
Moodley, Yoshan
Manica, Andrea
Liu, Hua
Roumagnac, Philippe
Falush, Daniel
Stamer, Christiana
Prugnolle, Franck
Van der Merwe, Schalk Willem

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Abstract

Infection of the stomach by Helicobacter pylori is ubiquitous among humans. However, although H. pylori strains from different geographic areas are associated with clear phylogeographic differentiation the age of an association between these bacteria with humans remains highly controversial. Here we show, using sequences from a large data set of bacterial strains that, as in humans, genetic diversity in H. pylori decreases with geographic distance from east Africa, the cradle of modern humans. We also observe similar clines of genetic isolation by distance (IBD) for both H. pylori and its human host at a worldwide scale. Like humans, simulations indicate that H. pylori seems to have spread from east Africa around 58,000 yr ago. Even at more restricted geographic scales, where IBD tends to become blurred, principal component clines in H. pylori from Europe strongly resemble the classical clines for Europeans described by Cavalli-Sforza and colleagues7. Taken together, our results establish that anatomically modern humans were already infected by H. pylori before their migrations from Africa and demonstrate that H. pylori has remained intimately associated with their human host populations ever since.

Description

Keywords

African, Helicobacter pylori, Origin, Humans, Stomach infections, Human association, Phylogeographic differentiation, Bacterial strains, Genetic diversity, Geographic distances, East Africa, Genetic isolation, Human host, Geographic scales, Spreading, Modern humans, Europe, Infection, Human populations, Genetic patterns, Ancestral populations, Geographic patterns, Hypothetical scenarios, Bacterial isolations, Sequencing, Transmission

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Linz, B, Balloux, F, Moodley, Y, Manica, A, Liu, H, Roumagnac, P, Falush, D, Stamer, C, Prugnolle, F, Van der Merwe, SW, Yamaoka, Y, Graham, DY, Perez-Trallero, E, Wadstrom, T, Suerbaum, S & Achtman, M 2007, 'An African origin for the intimate association between humans and Helicobacter pylori', Nature, vol. 445, no. 7130, pp. 915-918, [http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v445/n7130/abs/nature05562.html]