Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) are a primary factor in the pathogenesis of gastric cancer (GC); GC ranks third among cancer-related mortality. A clear understanding of the H. pylori genome factors underlying GC is necessary to develop more effective methods to prevent GC. A single-molecule real-time DNA sequencing-based H. pylori genome-wide association study analysis was performed using the H. pylori genome present in five early-stage GC (EGC) and five non-GC clinical DNA samples recovered from gastric washes. A total of 275 genes with 702 nucleotide variants (NVs) were found to be common to three or more patients with EGC but no non-GC patients (single-NV: 654/702, 93.2%; multi-NV: 40/702, 5.7%; deletion: 3/702, 0.4%; insertion: 3/702, 0.7%). Gene ontology analysis of H. pylori revealed that genes involved in the mitochondrial electron transport system, glycolytic processes and the TCA cycle were highly enriched. Cancer-related NVs were most frequently found in a member of the Helicobacter outer membrane protein family, hopL. In particular, one of the NVs in hopL was a novel six-nucleotide insertion (1159095̂1159096, TACTTC); this mutant was detected more frequently in a validation set of 50 additional EGC samples (22/50, 44.0%) than in 18 non-GC samples (3/18, 16.7%, P =.04). These results suggest that the hopL variant is associated with the development of GC and may serve as a genetic biomarker of H. pylori virulence and GC risk. Our assay can serve as a potent tool to expand our understanding of bacteria-associated tumorigenesis.
CITATION STYLE
Watanabe, Y., Oikawa, R., Kodaka, Y., Sato, Y., Ono, S., Kenmochi, T., … Itoh, F. (2021). Cancer-related genetic variants of Helicobacter pylori strains determined using gastric wash-based whole-genome analysis with single-molecule real-time technology. International Journal of Cancer, 148(1), 178–192. https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.33257
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