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Genomic structure and insertion sites of Helicobacter pylori prophages from various geographical origins
Scientific Reports, Volume: 7, Start page: 42471
Swansea University Authors: Ben Pascoe , Matthew Hitchings
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DOI (Published version): 10.1038/srep42471
Abstract
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...
Published in: | Scientific Reports |
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ISSN: | 2045-2322 |
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2017
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa32006 |
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2017-03-13T10:03:19.5395577 v2 32006 2017-02-17 Genomic structure and insertion sites of Helicobacter pylori prophages from various geographical origins 4660c0eb7e6bfd796cd749ae713ea558 0000-0001-6376-5121 Ben Pascoe Ben Pascoe true false be98847c72c14a731c4a6b7bc02b3bcf 0000-0002-5527-4709 Matthew Hitchings Matthew Hitchings true false 2017-02-17 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. Journal Article Scientific Reports 7 42471 2045-2322 16 2 2017 2017-02-16 10.1038/srep42471 http://rdcu.be/pi0q COLLEGE NANME COLLEGE CODE Swansea University 2017-03-13T10:03:19.5395577 2017-02-17T08:17:41.3320688 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences Swansea University Medical School - Medicine Filipa F. Vale 1 Alexandra Nunes 2 Mónica Oleastro 3 João P. Gomes 4 Daniel A. Sampaio 5 Raquel Rocha 6 Jorge M. B. Vítor 7 Lars Engstrand 8 Ben Pascoe 0000-0001-6376-5121 9 Elvire Berthenet 10 Samuel K. Sheppard 11 Matthew Hitchings 0000-0002-5527-4709 12 Francis Mégraud 13 Jamuna Vadivelu 14 Philippe Lehours 15 0032006-13032017095819.pdf srep42471.pdf 2017-03-13T09:58:19.6230000 Output 1433528 application/pdf Version of Record true 2017-02-16T00:00:00.0000000 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. true eng |
title |
Genomic structure and insertion sites of Helicobacter pylori prophages from various geographical origins |
spellingShingle |
Genomic structure and insertion sites of Helicobacter pylori prophages from various geographical origins Ben Pascoe Matthew Hitchings |
title_short |
Genomic structure and insertion sites of Helicobacter pylori prophages from various geographical origins |
title_full |
Genomic structure and insertion sites of Helicobacter pylori prophages from various geographical origins |
title_fullStr |
Genomic structure and insertion sites of Helicobacter pylori prophages from various geographical origins |
title_full_unstemmed |
Genomic structure and insertion sites of Helicobacter pylori prophages from various geographical origins |
title_sort |
Genomic structure and insertion sites of Helicobacter pylori prophages from various geographical origins |
author_id_str_mv |
4660c0eb7e6bfd796cd749ae713ea558 be98847c72c14a731c4a6b7bc02b3bcf |
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4660c0eb7e6bfd796cd749ae713ea558_***_Ben Pascoe be98847c72c14a731c4a6b7bc02b3bcf_***_Matthew Hitchings |
author |
Ben Pascoe Matthew Hitchings |
author2 |
Filipa F. Vale Alexandra Nunes Mónica Oleastro João P. Gomes Daniel A. Sampaio Raquel Rocha Jorge M. B. Vítor Lars Engstrand Ben Pascoe Elvire Berthenet Samuel K. Sheppard Matthew Hitchings Francis Mégraud Jamuna Vadivelu Philippe Lehours |
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Journal article |
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Scientific Reports |
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7 |
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42471 |
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Swansea University |
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2045-2322 |
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10.1038/srep42471 |
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Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences |
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Swansea University Medical School - Medicine{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}Swansea University Medical School - Medicine |
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description |
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. |
published_date |
2017-02-16T13:09:50Z |
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11.048064 |