BMC Microbiology (Aug 2009)

Analysis of virulence factors of <it>Helicobacter pylori </it>isolated from a Vietnamese population

  • Ta Long,
  • Trinh Tuan,
  • Matsuhisa Takeshi,
  • Murakami Kazunari,
  • Kodama Masaaki,
  • Okimoto Tadayoshi,
  • Takayama Akiko,
  • Nguyen Lam,
  • Uchida Tomohisa,
  • Ho Dang,
  • Hoang Hoa,
  • Kishida Tetsuko,
  • Fujioka Toshio,
  • Moriyama Masatsugu,
  • Yamaoka Yoshio

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2180-9-175
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
p. 175

Abstract

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Abstract Background The incidence of gastric cancer differs among countries in Asia, and it has been suggested that virulence factors associated with Helicobacter pylori are partly responsible. The aim of this study was to investigate several genetic factors regarded as virulence or molecular epidemiologic markers in H. pylori isolates from Vietnamese subjects. Results The cagA, vacA and cag right-end junction genotypes of 103 H. pylori strains from Vietnam (54 from Hanoi and 49 from Ho Chi Minh) were determined by PCR and sequencing. Three types of deletion in the region located upstream of the cagA Glu-Pro-Ile-Tyr-Ala (EPIYA) repeat region were identified: the 39-bp deletion type, the 18-bp deletion type, and the no-deletion type. The majority of strains studied (77%; 80/103) had the 18-bp deletion irrespective of geographical location in the country or clinical outcome. All of the 39-bp and 18-bp deletion-type strains possessed the East Asian type cagA repeat region. The type II cag right-end junction genotype was predominant (84%). The vacA m1 genotype was significantly more common in strains isolated in Hanoi, where the incidence of gastric cancer is higher, than in strains from Ho Chi Minh. Conclusion Pre-EPIYA-region typing of the cagA gene could provide a new genetic marker of H. pylori genomic diversity. Our data support the hypothesis that vacA m1 is closely associated with gastric carcinogenesis.