Affiliation:
1. Critical Care Medicine Department, Clinical Center, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA
Abstract
SUMMARY
Every human being is presumed to be infected by the fungus
Pneumocystis jirovecii
at least once in his or her lifetime. This fungus belongs to a large group of species that appear to exclusively infect mammals, with
P. jirovecii
being the only one known to cause disease in humans. The mystery of
P. jirovecii
origin and speciation is just beginning to unravel. Here, we provide a review of the major steps of
P. jirovecii
evolution. The
Pneumocystis
genus likely originated from soil or plant-associated organisms during the period of Cretaceous ~165 million years ago and successfully shifted to mammals. The transition coincided with a substantial loss of genes, many of which are related to the synthesis of nutrients that can be scavenged from hosts or cell wall components that could be targeted by the mammalian immune system. Following the transition, the
Pneumocystis
genus cospeciated with mammals. Each species specialized at infecting its own host. Host specialization is presumably built at least partially upon surface glycoproteins, whose protogene was acquired prior to the genus formation.
P. jirovecii
appeared at ~65 million years ago, overlapping with the emergence of the first primates.
P. jirovecii
and its sister species
P. macacae
, which infects macaques nowadays, may have had overlapping host ranges in the distant past. Clues from molecular clocks suggest that
P. jirovecii
did not cospeciate with humans. Molecular evidence suggests that
Pneumocystis
speciation involved chromosomal rearrangements and the mounting of genetic barriers that inhibit gene flow among species.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
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