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Ancient dispersal of the human fungal pathogen Cryptococcus gattii from the Amazon rainforest.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Hagen, Ferry 
Ceresini, Paulo C 
Polacheck, Itzhack 
van Nieuwerburgh, Filip 

Abstract

Over the past two decades, several fungal outbreaks have occurred, including the high-profile 'Vancouver Island' and 'Pacific Northwest' outbreaks, caused by Cryptococcus gattii, which has affected hundreds of otherwise healthy humans and animals. Over the same time period, C. gattii was the cause of several additional case clusters at localities outside of the tropical and subtropical climate zones where the species normally occurs. In every case, the causative agent belongs to a previously rare genotype of C. gattii called AFLP6/VGII, but the origin of the outbreak clades remains enigmatic. Here we used phylogenetic and recombination analyses, based on AFLP and multiple MLST datasets, and coalescence gene genealogy to demonstrate that these outbreaks have arisen from a highly-recombining C. gattii population in the native rainforest of Northern Brazil. Thus the modern virulent C. gattii AFLP6/VGII outbreak lineages derived from mating events in South America and then dispersed to temperate regions where they cause serious infections in humans and animals.

Description

Keywords

Animals, Brazil, British Columbia, Cells, Cultured, Cryptococcosis, Cryptococcus gattii, Disease Outbreaks, Genes, Fungal, Humans, Likelihood Functions, Macrophages, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Molecular Sequence Data, Multilocus Sequence Typing, Mycological Typing Techniques, Northwestern United States, Phylogeny, Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length, Trees, Tropical Climate, Virulence

Journal Title

PLoS One

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1932-6203
1932-6203

Volume Title

8

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)