The yeast–human coevolution: Fungal transition from passengers, colonizers, and invaders

Author:

Nenciarini Stefano1ORCID,Renzi Sonia1ORCID,di Paola Monica1ORCID,Meriggi Niccolò1ORCID,Cavalieri Duccio1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology University of Florence Florence Italy

Abstract

AbstractFungi are the cause of more than a billion infections in humans every year, although their interactions with the host are still neglected compared to bacteria. Major systemic fungal infections are very unusual in the healthy population, due to the long history of coevolution with the human host. Humans are routinely exposed to environmental fungi and can host a commensal mycobiota, which is increasingly considered as a key player in health and disease. Here, we review the current knowledge on host‐fungi coevolution and the factors that regulate their interaction. On one hand, fungi have learned to survive and inhabit the host organisms as a natural ecosystem, on the other hand, the host immune system finely tunes the response toward fungi. In turn, recognition of fungi as commensals or pathogens regulates the host immune balance in health and disease. In the human gut ecosystem, yeasts provide a fingerprint of the transient microbiota. Their status as passengers or colonizers is related to the integrity of the gut barrier and the risk of multiple disorders. Thus, the study of this less known component of the microbiota could unravel the rules of the transition from passengers to colonizers and invaders, as well as their dependence on the innate component of the host's immune response.This article is categorized under: Infectious Diseases > Environmental Factors Immune System Diseases > Environmental Factors Infectious Diseases > Molecular and Cellular Physiology

Funder

Joint Programming Initiative A healthy diet for a healthy life

Regione Toscana

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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