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A positively selected fur -R88H Mutation enhances Helicobacter pylori fitness in a High-Salt environment and alters Fur-Dependent regulation of gene expression
Journal article   Peer reviewed

A positively selected fur -R88H Mutation enhances Helicobacter pylori fitness in a High-Salt environment and alters Fur-Dependent regulation of gene expression

John T Loh, Emily L Struttmann, Natalie Favret, M Lorena Harvey, Suman B Pakala, Abha Chopra, Mark S McClain and Timothy L Cover
Infection and immunity, Vol.91(2), e0042022
2023
PMID: 36633416

Abstract

Bacterial Proteins - genetics Bacterial Proteins - metabolism Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial Helicobacter Infections Helicobacter pylori - genetics Helicobacter pylori - physiology Humans Mutation Repressor Proteins - genetics Repressor Proteins - metabolism Sodium Chloride - metabolism
Both Helicobacter pylori infection and a high-salt diet are risk factors for gastric cancer. We previously showed that a mutation in fur (encoding the ferric uptake regulator variant Fur-R88H) was positively selected in H. pylori strains isolated from experimentally infected Mongolian gerbils receiving a high-salt diet. In the present study, we report that continuous H. pylori growth in high-salt conditions in vitro also leads to positive selection of the fur-R88H mutation. Competition experiments with strains containing wild-type fur or fur-R88H, each labeled with unique nucleotide barcodes, showed that the fur-R88H mutation enhances H. pylori fitness under high-salt conditions but reduces H. pylori fitness under routine culture conditions. The fitness advantage of the fur-R88H mutant under high-salt conditions was abrogated by the addition of supplemental iron. To test the hypothesis that the fur-R88H mutation alters the regulatory properties of Fur, we compared the transcriptional profiles of strains containing wild-type fur or fur-R88H. Increased transcript levels of fecA2, which encodes a predicted TonB-dependent outer membrane transporter, were detected in the fur-R88H variant compared to those in the strain containing wild-type fur under both high-salt and routine conditions. Competition experiments showed that fecA2 contributes to H. pylori fitness under both high-salt and routine conditions. These results provide new insights into mechanisms by which the fur-R88H mutation confers a selective advantage to H. pylori in high-salt environments.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
1 Clinical & Life Sciences
1.95 Gastrointestinal & Esophageal Diseases
1.95.387 Helicobacter Pylori
Web Of Science research areas
Immunology
Infectious Diseases
ESI research areas
Immunology
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