CORE
CO
nnecting
RE
positories
Services
Services overview
Explore all CORE services
Access to raw data
API
Dataset
FastSync
Content discovery
Recommender
Discovery
OAI identifiers
OAI Resolver
Managing content
Dashboard
Bespoke contracts
Consultancy services
Support us
Support us
Membership
Sponsorship
Research partnership
About
About
About us
Our mission
Team
Blog
FAQs
Contact us
Community governance
Governance
Advisory Board
Board of supporters
Research network
Innovations
Our research
Labs
research article
Gene content, phage cycle regulation model and prophage inactivation disclosed by prophage genomics in the Helicobacter pylori Genome Project
Authors
D Abad-Baroja
O Abiodun
+280 more
CC Abnet
JJ Abreu
CA Adinortey
MB Adinortey
H Aftab
RB Agostini
J Akada
KO Akande
L Alcoba
RI Alfaray
R Ally
JO Alonso-Larraga
HN Altayeb
S Ansari
M Arita
E Asare
PP Assumpção
M Azrad
S Backert
M Ballal
E Barreiro-Alonso
TF Bartelli
L Benejat
DE Berg
TT Binh
ES Björnsson
MJ Blaser
AS Bockarie
R Bollag
DS Bordin
J Botargues
LE Bravo
MM Bravo
E Brunet-Mas
L Bujanda
X Calvet
MC Camargo
C Campos-Núñez
R Cannizzaro
V Canzonieri
C Castaneda
F Castillo
M Castillo
SJ Chanock
M Chaves-Cervantes
X Chen
JL Cherry
Á Chiner-Oms
IJ Choi
H Cichoz-Lach
I Comas
AH Corvalan
TL Cover
TJ Cromarty
M Cruz
M Cruz-Correa
P de Jesus Ngoma-Kisoko
Re, V De
JP Dekker
P Delgado-Guillena
S Demiryas
E Dias-Neto
X Didelot
RL Dominguez
MJ Domper-Arnal
HDQ Dung
S Durán-Bermúdez
L Engstrand
H Enroth
D Falush
KA Fauzia
M Fernández-Reyes
RM Ferreira
C Figueiredo
W Fischer
T Fleitas-Kanonnikoff
V Flores
JG Fox
M Fukuyo
Y Gao
A García-Cancino
S García-Mateo
J Geary
S Georgopoulos
S Ghirotto
RH Gilman
JP Gisbert
BD Gold
AM Goldstein
R Gonzalez
P Gonzalez-Hormazabal
M González-Pons
KJ Goodman
G Gościniak
DY Graham
AI Gunnarsdóttir
AJ Gutiérrez-Escobar
H Guðjónsson
R Haas
F Haesebrouck
H Harðardóttir
E Hernandez
R Herrera-Goepfert
B Hicks
C Hosking
K Htet
N Hu
RJ Huang
A Hutchinson
JH Hwang
H In
WR Jacobs
K Jadallah
Q Jehanne
C Jemilohun
D Johnson
L Jonaitis
P Jonaitis
K Jones
JG Jónasson
S Kamiya
Y Katsura
PM Keller
N Kepil
B Kessing
I Kikuste
JG Kim
N Kim
G Kiudelis
V Kiudelis
I Kobayashi
B Kocazeybek
I Korona-Glowniak
U Krishna
EJ Kruse
P Krzyżek
J Kupcinskas
C Lane
S Lario
Y-C Lee
P Lehours
M Leja
P Linares
A Link
J-M Liou
MA Livzan
J Lizasoain
JT Loh
MF Loke
A Lopez
W Luo
JC Machado
FA Magaji
R Malekzadeh
P Malfertheiner
L Mariño-Ramírez
V Martin
B Martinez-Gonzalez
FJ Martínez-Martínez
I Matalka
T Matsuhisa
T Matsumoto
H Maulahela
F Megraud
S Michopoulos
M Miftahussurur
MS Moldobaeva
S Molina-Castro
M Montes
L Moreira
DR Morgan
RD Morgan
EA Muro
ZY Muñoz-Ramírez
M Naumann
DM Ngoyi
M Norton
M Noureen
DN Nunes
EG Ofori
U Okonkwo
M Oleastro
O Olu-Abiodun
A Omotoso
A On
N Osada
T Osaki
CC Osuagwu
OO Owoseni
C Parra-Sepúlveda
D Pawełka
A Pazos
RM Peek
A Pelosof
A Peretz
MB Piazuelo
D Pohl
NL Price
I Pérez-Martínez
L Quiel
D Quilty
N Raaf
CS Rabkin
S Rajagopalan
A Rakhat
C Raley
MJ Ramírez-Lázaro
V Ramírez-Mayorga
A Riquelme
RJ Roberts
LM Rodriguez
J Romero-Gallo
D Rudzīte
A Rūdule
IN Sagynbekuly
S Sandoval-Motta
S Sarıbas
O Secka
CA Serrano
DN Sgouras
S Sheppard
V Shetty
T Shimura
PK Shrestha
J Skieceviciene
A Smet
M Song
M Sotoudeh
T Sugihartono
AF Syam
CZ Sztokfisz
W Szymczak
E Tamayo
P Tan
E Tarazona-Santos
İ Tasçı
PR Taylor
K Teshome
K Thorell
I Tishkov
K Tokunaga
J Torres
RC Torres
B Tran
TTH Trang
E Tshibangu-Kabamba
A Tshimpi-Wola
VV Tsukanov
VP Tuan
GD Tumba
I Uchiyama
J Vadivelu
FF Vale
Khien, V Van
A Vanags
R Vangravs
G Varkalaite
C Varon
B Velapatino
KM Vellasamy
M Villagra
T Vincze
K Wagner
D Wang
LA Waskito
J White
KT Wilson
M-S Wu
K Yahara
Y Yamaoka
M Yeager
TT Yee
KG Yeoh
K Yu
R Zamudio
S Zanussi
Y Zhao
B Zhu
F Zhu
Ģ Šķenders
Publication date
1 January 2024
Publisher
UK
Doi
Cite
Abstract
Prophages can have major clinical implications through their ability to change pathogenic bacterial traits. There is limited understanding of the prophage role in ecological, evolutionary, adaptive processes and pathogenicity of Helicobacter pylori, a widespread bacterium causally associated with gastric cancer. Inferring the exact prophage genomic location and completeness requires complete genomes. The international Helicobacter pylori Genome Project (HpGP) dataset comprises 1011 H. pylori complete clinical genomes enriched with epigenetic data. We thoroughly evaluated the H. pylori prophage genomic content in the HpGP dataset. We investigated population evolutionary dynamics through phylogenetic and pangenome analyses. Additionally, we identified genome rearrangements and assessed the impact of prophage presence on bacterial gene disruption and methylome. We found that 29.5% (298) of the HpGP genomes contain prophages, of which only 32.2% (96) were complete, minimizing the burden of prophage carriage. The prevalence of H. pylori prophage sequences was variable by geography and ancestry, but not by disease status of the human host. Prophage insertion occasionally results in gene disruption that can change the global bacterial epigenome. Gene function prediction allowed the development of the first model for lysogenic-lytic cycle regulation in H. pylori. We have disclosed new prophage inactivation mechanisms that appear to occur by genome rearrangement, merger with other mobile elements, and pseudogene accumulation. Our analysis provides a comprehensive framework for H. pylori prophage biological and genomics, offering insights into lysogeny regulation and bacterial adaptation to prophages. © 2024 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC
Similar works
Full text
Available Versions
Repositorio Institucional INEN
See this paper in CORE
Go to the repository landing page
Download from data provider
oai:repositorio.inen.sld.pe:20...
Last time updated on 02/08/2025