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Infect. Immun., Jan 1995, 116-121, Vol 63, No. 1
NS Akopyants, KA Eaton and DE Berg
Clinical isolates of Helicobacter pylori, the gastric pathogen implicated
in gastritis, peptic ulcers, and gastric cancer in humans, are diverse in
traits likely to be important for colonization and disease. Here we report
studies using a gnotobiotic piglet-H. pylori infection model to test for
host-specific adaptation and to detect cocolonization by different strains.
First, an H. pylori strain that initially had grown only weakly in piglets
was adapted to them by spontaneous mutation and selection during 12 serial
passages; this resulted in an increase in yield from about 10(3) to >
10(7) bacteria per g of mucosa. Second, piglets were fed mixtures of two
different well-adapted strains and the presence of one or both strains was
monitored by restriction analysis of a PCR-amplified flagellar (flaA) gene
segment. The restriction fragment patterns from pools of bacteria indicated
that both strains had colonized most piglets and that both strains were
present at more than half of the individual biopsy sites, although often at
unequal ratios. This suggests a microcolonial mode of growth with limited
migration of bacteria between neighboring sites in the gastric mucosa. We
propose that the gnotobiotic piglet-H. pylori infection model will be
useful for testing how spontaneous mutation, selection, and DNA transfer
between strains during mixed infection may each contribute to adaptation to
specific hosts and the evolution of virulence of this important pathogen.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Adaptive mutation and cocolonization during Helicobacter pylori infection of gnotobiotic piglets
Department of Molecular Microbiology, Washington University Medical School, St. Louis, Missouri 63110.
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