Skip masthead and go to navigation, main content or sidebar.

Penn State shield. Click to visit main Penn State website CIDD, the Center for Infectious Disease Dynamics. Click to visit our home page

Search   …this site   …Penn State  

Published 2006

Big cat eats human… and acquires new pathogen?

Male lion eatingAbout half of all humans harbor Helicobacter pylori in their stomachs — this bacterium can cause stomach ulcers, gastritis and gastric cancer. H. acinonychis, a close relative of H. pylori, colonizes the stomachs of several big cats — cheetah, tiger and lion.

Now Stephan C. Schuster, Mark Achtman from the Max-Planck Institute for Infectious Biology (Berlin, Germany), and colleagues have sequenced the genomes of this feline Helicobacter species to answer the question of "Who ate whom?" In other words, did H. pylori evolve from an ancestral H. acinonychis that jumped from cats to humans, or vice versa?

The researchers found that while the two genomes are generally extremely similar, the H. acinonychis genome contains fragmented (non-functional) versions of numerous H. pylori genes. Interestingly, many of these genes encode outer membrane proteins that might provoke an immune response. What's more, only a handful of genes are specific to H. acinonychis, but five of these are likely to help the bacterium evade host immune defenses.

The researchers conclude that within the last 200,000 years a big cat ate an early human infected with H. pylori — and some of the H. pylori made it past the cat's immune defenses to start on its evolutionary journey of becoming H. acinonychis.

» Read the paper on the on the PLoS Genetics website

Details

Authors: Mark Eppinger, Claudia Baar, Bodo Linz, Günter Raddatz, Christa Lanz, Heike Keller, Giovanna Morelli, Helga Gressmann, Mark Achtman and Stephan C. Schuster

Title: Who ate whom? Adaptive Helicobacter genomic changes that accompanied a host jump from early humans to large felines

Journal: PLoS Genetics

doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.0020120

Related links

Mark Achtman's website at the Max-Planck Institut für Infektionsbiologie, Berlin, Germany