Journal ArticleOpen Access
Virulence Genes and Neutral DNA Markers of<i>Helicobacter pylori</i>Isolates from Different Ethnic Communities of West Bengal, India
Author Affiliations
Washington University in St. Louis, International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Institute of Post Graduate Medical Education and Research, National Institute of Cholera and Enteric Diseases
Published InJournal of Clinical Microbiology
Year2003
Citations41
Abstract
Virulence-associated genes and neutral DNA markers of Helicobacter pylori strains from the Santhal and Oroan ethnic minorities of West Bengal, India, were studied. These people have traditionally been quite separate from other Indians and differ culturally, genetically, and linguistically from mainstream Bengalis, whose H. pylori strains have been characterized previously. H. pylori was found in each of 49 study participants, although none had peptic ulcer disease, and was cultured from 31 of them. All strains carried the cag pathogenicity island and potentially toxigenic s1 alleles of vacuolating cytotoxin gene (vacA) and were resistant to at least 8 micro g of metronidazole per ml. DNA sequence motifs in vacA mid-region m1 alleles, cagA, and an informative insertion or deletion motif next…
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