Abstract

Helicobacter pylori infection causes chronic active gastritis that after many years of infection can develop into peptic ulceration or gastric adenocarcinoma. The bacterium is highly adapted to surviving in the gastric environment and a key adaptation is the virulence factor urease. Although widely postulated, the requirement of urease expression for persistent infection has not been elucidated experimentally as conventional urease knockout mutants are incapable of colonization. To overcome this constraint, conditional H. pylori urease mutants were constructed by adapting the tetracycline inducible expression system that enabled changing the urease phenotype of the bacteria during established infection. Through tight regulation we demonstrate that urease expression is not only required for establishing initial colonization but also for maintaining chronic infection. Furthermore, successful isolation of tet-escape mutants from a late infection time point revealed the strong selective pressure on this gastric pathogen to continuously express urease in order to maintain chronic infection. In addition to mutations in the conditional gene expression system, escape mutants were found to harbor changes in other genes including the alternative RNA polymerase sigma factor, fliA, highlighting the genetic plasticity of H. pylori to adapt to a changing niche. The tet-system described here opens up opportunities to studying genes involved in the chronic stage of H. pylori infection to gain insight into bacterial mechanisms promoting immune escape and life-long infection. Furthermore, this genetic tool also allows for a new avenue of inquiry into understanding the importance of various virulence determinants in a changing biological environment when the bacterium is put under duress.

Highlights

  • The human gut pathogen Helicobacter pylori has coevolved with humans over thousands of years to dominate the gastric niche [1,2,3]

  • The bacteria cannot establish an infection in the host without this enzyme, and widely postulated, the requirement of urease for chronic infection of the host has not been tested experimentally as conventional urease mutants are incapable of colonization

  • A genetic system was introduced that allowed for the making of H. pylori strains in which urease expression could be turned off after the bacteria have colonised the stomach

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Summary

Introduction

The human gut pathogen Helicobacter pylori has coevolved with humans over thousands of years to dominate the gastric niche [1,2,3]. H. pylori infection is persistent and clinical disease usually develops after many years of chronic inflammation and epithelial damage. Due to increasing rates of antibiotic treatment failure [11, 12] there is a pressing need for further research into the bacterium’s mechanisms for persistence and immune evasion strategies. These are of particular importance to understanding H. pylori pathogenesis and to identifying novel targets for the development of new treatment options

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