
Environmental Candida auris and the Global Warming Emergence Hypothesis
Author(s) -
Arturo Casadevall,
Dimitrios P. Kontoyiannis,
Vincent Robert
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
mbio
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.562
H-Index - 121
eISSN - 2161-2129
pISSN - 2150-7511
DOI - 10.1128/mbio.00360-21
Subject(s) - candida auris , global warming , organism , adaptation (eye) , biology , ecology , isolation (microbiology) , climate change , opportunistic pathogen , geography , microbiology and biotechnology , antifungal , virulence , neuroscience , paleontology , biochemistry , gene
Global warming was proposed to be a contributing cause for the nearly simultaneous emergence of different clades of Candida auris as a nosocomial pathogen in different continents. The global warming emergence hypothesis posits that C. auris existed in the environment prior to its clinical recognition and became pathogenic for humans because of thermal adaptation in response to climate change. The isolation of C. auris from two sites in the remote Andaman Islands establishes it as an environmental organism, a necessary condition for the hypothesis. The observation that one environmental isolate grew slower at mammalian temperatures than clinical strains is consistent with the notion that their ancestor recently adapted to higher temperatures. The knowledge that C. auris can be recovered from the environment should prompt additional searches to define its ecological niches, and the analysis of future environmental isolates will provide evidence for validating or refuting the global warming emergence hypothesis.