Prevalence of vacuolating cytotoxin production and distribution of distinct vacA alleles in Helicobacter pylori from China

Z. Pan, D.E. Berg, R.W.M. van der Hulst, W. Su, A. Raudonikiene, S. Xiao, J. Dankert, G.N.J. Tytgat, A. van der Ende

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Abstract

Studies of Helicobacter pylori from the West have linked production of vacuolating cytotoxin and a particular signal sequence (s1a) allele of the underlying vacA gene to peptic ulcer disease (PUD). Among Chinese H. pylori, most isolates from both PUD and gastritis patients were toxigenic (35/46 and 29/35, respectively). Polymerase chain reaction and DNA sequencing showed that 95 of 96 isolates carried vacA s1a alleles. In the mid-region, 78 of 96 isolates carried m2; 14 were m1-like but only 87% identical (DNA-level) to classical m1 and were designated m1b; the other 4 were unusual hybrids (m1b-type proximal, m2-type distal). Isolates with m1b and m1b-m2 alleles produced higher levels of vacuolating activity than did isolates with m2 alleles (P <.01). There was no association between any vacA allele and disease. These results suggest that the composition of H. pylori gene pools varies geographically and that other as-yet-unknown polymorphic H. pylori genes are important in PUD
Original languageUndefined/Unknown
Pages (from-to)220-226
JournalThe Journal of Infectious Diseases
Volume178
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1998

Keywords

  • AMC wi-co

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