Climate change has been proposed as a set of factors that affect the frequency, distribution, and morbimortality of many infectious diseases, in which mycosis has also been impacted. Most fungi… Click to show full abstract
Climate change has been proposed as a set of factors that affect the frequency, distribution, and morbimortality of many infectious diseases, in which mycosis has also been impacted. Most fungi have the ability to cause disease in mammalian hosts as a result of their competitive fitness advantages that allow adaptation to diverse ecological niches. Candida auris has burst in the infectious disease scenario, and it has been hypothesized that a combination of stress adaptation and biotic predation has driven this fungus in the evolution of thermotolerance and halotolerance mechanisms to adapt to different environmental niches, which have resulted in the capacity to cross the thermal infection barrier in humans. Consequently, the isolation of C. auris from estuaries in Colombia adds to the evidence that suggests that this fungus existed in the environment previously to being recognized as a human pathogen, and promotes the need for further investigations to identify additional ecological niches.
               
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