Helicobacter pylori Sequences Reflect Past Human Migrations.

Genome dynamics Pub Date : 2009-01-01 Epub Date: 2009-08-19 DOI:10.1159/000235763
Y Moodley, B Linz
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引用次数: 47

Abstract

The long association between the stomach bacterium Helicobacter pylori and humans, in combination with its predominantly within-family transmission route and its exceptionally high DNA sequence diversity, make this bacterium a reliable marker for discerning both recent and ancient human population movements. As much of the diversity in H. pylori sequences is generated by recombination and mutation on a local scale, the partitioning of H. pylori sequences from a large globally distributed data set into six geographic populations enabled the detection of recent ( < 500 years) human population movements including the European colonial expansion and the slave trade. The further separation of bacterial populations into distinct sub-populations traced prehistoric population movements like the settlement of the Americas by Asians across the Bering Strait and the Bantu migrations in Africa. The ability to deduce ancestral population structure from modern sequences was a key development that allowed the detection of zones of admixture, such as Europe, and the inference of multiple migration waves into these zones. The significantly similar global population structure of both H. pylori and humans confirmed not only an evolutionary time-scale association between host and parasite, but also that humans had carried H. pylori in their stomachs on their migrations out of Africa.

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幽门螺杆菌序列反映了过去人类的迁移。
胃细菌幽门螺杆菌与人类之间的长期联系,结合其主要的家族内传播途径和异常高的DNA序列多样性,使这种细菌成为辨别最近和古代人类人口流动的可靠标记。由于幽门螺杆菌序列的大部分多样性是通过局部范围内的重组和突变产生的,因此将幽门螺杆菌序列从全球分布的大型数据集中划分为六个地理种群,可以检测最近(< 500年)的人类人口流动,包括欧洲殖民扩张和奴隶贸易。细菌种群进一步分化为不同的亚种群,可以追溯到史前人口迁移,比如亚洲人越过白令海峡在美洲的定居,以及班图人在非洲的迁徙。从现代序列推断祖先种群结构的能力是一个关键的发展,它允许检测混合区域,如欧洲,并推断到这些区域的多次迁移波。幽门螺杆菌和人类的全球种群结构非常相似,这不仅证实了宿主和寄生虫在进化时间尺度上的联系,而且证实了人类在走出非洲的迁徙过程中胃中携带了幽门螺杆菌。
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The evolutionary dynamics of transposable elements in eukaryote genomes. SINEs as driving forces in genome evolution. Unstable microsatellite repeats facilitate rapid evolution of coding and regulatory sequences. Satellite DNA evolution. Satellite DNA-mediated effects on genome regulation.
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