Early Humans Were Infected by Two Distinct Types of Helicobacter Bacteria, New Study Reveals

Early Humans Were Infected by Two Distinct Types of Helicobacter Bacteria, New Study Reveals

Two ecospecies of Helicobacter pylori — named ‘Hardy’ and ‘Ubiquitous’ — co-existed in the stomachs of modern humans since before they left Africa and were dispersed around the world by human migrations, according to new research.

The post Early Humans Were Infected by Two Distinct Types of Helicobacter Bacteria, New Study Reveals appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News.

 Two ecospecies of Helicobacter pylori — named ‘Hardy’ and ‘Ubiquitous’ — co-existed in the stomachs of modern humans since before they left Africa and were dispersed around the world by human migrations, according to new research.
The post Early Humans Were Infected by Two Distinct Types of Helicobacter Bacteria, New Study Reveals appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News. Anthropology, Biology, Medicine, Paleoanthropology, Bacteria, Genome, Helicobacter, Helicobacter pylori, Homo, Homo sapiens, Human, Migration Sci.News: Breaking Science News

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