61 research outputs found
PLoS Genet.
The Helicobacter pylori cag pathogenicity island (cagPAI) encodes a type IV secretion system. Humans infected with cagPAI-carrying H. pylori are at increased risk for sequelae such as gastric cancer. Housekeeping genes in H. pylori show considerable genetic diversity; but the diversity of virulence factors such as the cagPAI, which transports the bacterial oncogene CagA into host cells, has not been systematically investigated. Here we compared the complete cagPAI sequences for 38 representative isolates from all known H. pylori biogeographic populations. Their gene content and gene order were highly conserved. The phylogeny of most cagPAI genes was similar to that of housekeeping genes, indicating that the cagPAI was probably acquired only once by H. pylori, and its genetic diversity reflects the isolation by distance that has shaped this bacterial species since modern humans migrated out of Africa. Most isolates induced IL-8 release in gastric epithelial cells, indicating that the function of the Cag secretion system has been conserved despite some genetic rearrangements. More than one third of cagPAI genes, in particular those encoding cell-surface exposed proteins, showed signatures of diversifying (Darwinian) selection at more than 5% of codons. Several unknown gene products predicted to be under Darwinian selection are also likely to be secreted proteins (e.g. HP0522, HP0535). One of these, HP0535, is predicted to code for either a new secreted candidate effector protein or a protein which interacts with CagA because it contains two genetic lineages, similar to cagA. Our study provides a resource that can guide future research on the biological roles and host interactions of cagPAI proteins, including several whose function is still unknown
On a Recent Construction of "Vacuum-like" Quantum Field States in Curved Spacetime
Afshordi, Aslanbeigi and Sorkin have recently proposed a construction of a
distinguished "S-J state" for scalar field theory in (bounded regions of)
general curved spacetimes. We establish rigorously that the proposal is
well-defined on globally hyperbolic spacetimes or spacetime regions that can be
embedded as relatively compact subsets of other globally hyperbolic spacetimes,
and also show that, whenever the proposal is well-defined, it yields a pure
quasifree state. However, by explicitly considering portions of ultrastatic
spacetimes, we show that the S-J state is not in general a Hadamard state. In
the specific case where the Cauchy surface is a round 3-sphere, we prove that
the representation induced by the S-J state is generally not unitarily
equivalent to that of a Hadamard state, and indeed that the representations
induced by S-J states on nested regions of the ultrastatic spacetime also fail
to be unitarily equivalent in general. The implications of these results are
discussed.Comment: 25pp, LaTeX. v2 References added, typos corrected. To appear in Class
Quantum Gravit
Cosmological horizons and reconstruction of quantum field theories
As a starting point, we state some relevant geometrical properties enjoyed by
the cosmological horizon of a certain class of Friedmann-Robertson-Walker
backgrounds. Those properties are generalised to a larger class of expanding
spacetimes admitting a geodesically complete cosmological horizon \scrim
common to all co-moving observers. This structure is later exploited in order
to recast, in a cosmological background, some recent results for a linear
scalar quantum field theory in spacetimes asymptotically flat at null infinity.
Under suitable hypotheses on , encompassing both the cosmological de Sitter
background and a large class of other FRW spacetimes, the algebra of
observables for a Klein-Gordon field is mapped into a subalgebra of the algebra
of observables \cW(\scrim) constructed on the cosmological horizon. There is
exactly one pure quasifree state on \cW(\scrim) which fulfils a
suitable energy-positivity condition with respect to a generator related with
the cosmological time displacements. Furthermore induces a preferred
physically meaningful quantum state for the quantum theory in the
bulk. If admits a timelike Killing generator preserving \scrim, then the
associated self-adjoint generator in the GNS representation of has
positive spectrum (i.e. energy). Moreover turns out to be invariant
under every symmetry of the bulk metric which preserves the cosmological
horizon. In the case of an expanding de Sitter spacetime, coincides
with the Euclidean (Bunch-Davies) vacuum state, hence being Hadamard in this
case. Remarks on the validity of the Hadamard property for in more
general spacetimes are presented.Comment: 32 pages, 1 figure, to appear on Comm. Math. Phys., dedicated to
Professor Klaus Fredenhagen on the occasion of his 60th birthda
Variations in Helicobacter pylori Cytotoxin-Associated Genes and Their Influence in Progression to Gastric Cancer: Implications for Prevention
Helicobacter pylori (HP) is a bacterium that colonizes the human stomach and can establish a long-term infection of the gastric mucosa. Persistent Hp infection often induces gastritis and is associated with the development of peptic ulcer disease, atrophic gastritis, and gastric adenocarcinoma. Virulent HP isolates harbor the cag (cytotoxin-associated genes) pathogenicity island (cagPAI), a 40 kb stretch of DNA that encodes components of a type IV secretion system (T4SS). This T4SS forms a pilus for the injection of virulence factors into host target cells, such as the CagA oncoprotein. We analyzed the genetic variability in cagA and other selected genes of the HP cagPAI (cagC, cagE, cagL, cagT, cagV and cag Gamma) using DNA extracted from frozen gastric biopsies or from clinical isolates. Study subjects were 95 cagA+ patients that were histologically diagnosed with chronic gastritis or gastric cancer in Venezuela and Mexico, areas with high prevalence of Hp infection. Sequencing reactions were carried out by both Sanger and next-generation pyrosequencing (454 Roche) methods. We found a total of 381 variants with unambiguous calls observed in at least 10% of the originally tested samples and reference strains. We compared the frequencies of these genetic variants between gastric cancer and chronic gastritis cases. Twenty-six SNPs (11 non-synonymous and 14 synonymous) showed statistically significant differences (P<0.05), and two SNPs, in position 1039 and 1041 of cagE, showed a highly significant association with cancer (p-value = 2.07×10−6), and the variant codon was located in the VirB3 homology domain of Agrobacterium. The results of this study may provide preliminary information to target antibiotic treatment to high-risk individuals, if effects of these variants are confirmed in further investigations
A Global Overview of the Genetic and Functional Diversity in the Helicobacter pylori cag Pathogenicity Island
The Helicobacter pylori cag pathogenicity island (cagPAI) encodes a type IV secretion system. Humans infected with cagPAI–carrying H. pylori are at increased risk for sequelae such as gastric cancer. Housekeeping genes in H. pylori show considerable genetic diversity; but the diversity of virulence factors such as the cagPAI, which transports the bacterial oncogene CagA into host cells, has not been systematically investigated. Here we compared the complete cagPAI sequences for 38 representative isolates from all known H. pylori biogeographic populations. Their gene content and gene order were highly conserved. The phylogeny of most cagPAI genes was similar to that of housekeeping genes, indicating that the cagPAI was probably acquired only once by H. pylori, and its genetic diversity reflects the isolation by distance that has shaped this bacterial species since modern humans migrated out of Africa. Most isolates induced IL-8 release in gastric epithelial cells, indicating that the function of the Cag secretion system has been conserved despite some genetic rearrangements. More than one third of cagPAI genes, in particular those encoding cell-surface exposed proteins, showed signatures of diversifying (Darwinian) selection at more than 5% of codons. Several unknown gene products predicted to be under Darwinian selection are also likely to be secreted proteins (e.g. HP0522, HP0535). One of these, HP0535, is predicted to code for either a new secreted candidate effector protein or a protein which interacts with CagA because it contains two genetic lineages, similar to cagA. Our study provides a resource that can guide future research on the biological roles and host interactions of cagPAI proteins, including several whose function is still unknown
Genomic structure and insertion sites of Helicobacter pylori prophages from various geographical origins
We present the full genomic sequences, insertion sites and phylogenetic analysis of 28 prophages found in H. pylori isolates from patients of distinct disease types, ranging from gastritis to gastric cancer, and geographic origins, covering most continents. The gentic diversity of H pylori is known to be influenced by these genomic elements including prophages who’s geneomes range from 22.6 to 33.0 Kbp. There was a high conservation of integration site shared in over 50% of cases with greater than 40% or prophage genomes harbouring insertion sequences (IS). Furthermore prophage genomes present a robust phylogeographic pattern, revealing four distinct clusters: one African, one Asian and two European prophage populations. There was evidence of recombination within the genome of some prophages, which resulted in genome mosaics composed by different populations, which may yield additional H. pylori phenotypes
Comparative Genomics of Helicobacter pylori Strains of China Associated with Different Clinical Outcome
In this study, a whole-genome CombiMatrix Custom oligonucleotide tiling microarray with 90000 probes covering six sequenced Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) genomes was designed. This microarray was used to compare the genomic profiles of eight unsequenced strains isolated from patients with different gastroduodenal diseases in Heilongjiang province of China. Since significant genomic variation was found among these strains, an additional 76 H. pylori strains associated with different clinical outcomes were isolated from various provinces of China. These strains were tested by polymerase chain reaction to demonstrate this distinction. We identified several highly variable regions in strains associated with gastritis, gastric ulceration, and gastric cancer. These regions are associated with genes involved in the bacterial type I, type II, and type III R-M systems. They were also associated with the virB gene, which lies on the well-studied cag pathogenic island. While previous studies have reported on the diverse genetic characterization of this pathogenic island, in this study, we find that it is conserved in all strains tested by microarray. Moreover, a number of genes involved in the type IV secretion system, which is related to horizontal DNA transfer between H. pylori strains, were identified in the comparative analysis of the strain-specific genes. These findings may provide insight into new biomarkers for the prediction of gastric diseases
RNAseq analysis of Aspergillus fumigatus in blood reveals a just wait and see resting stage behavior
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