| Literature DB >> 33727354 |
Parth Arora1,2, Prerna Singh1, Yue Wang3, Anamika Yadav1, Kalpana Pawar1, Ashutosh Singh1, Gadi Padmavati2, Jianping Xu3, Anuradha Chowdhary4.
Abstract
Candida auris is a multidrug resistant pathogen that presents a serious global threat to human health. As C. auris is a newly emerged pathogen, several questions regarding its ecological niche remain unexplored. While species closely related to C. auris have been detected in different environmental habitats, little is known about the natural habitat(s) of C. auris Here, we explored the virgin habitats around the very isolated Andaman Islands in the Indian Ocean for evidence of C. auris We sampled coastal wetlands, including rocky shores, sandy beaches, tidal marshes, and mangrove swamps, around the Andaman group of the Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Union Territory, in India. Forty-eight samples of sediment soil and seawater were collected from eight sampling sites representing the heterogeneity of intertidal habitats across the east and west coast of South Andaman district. C. auris was isolated from two of the eight sampling sites, a salt marsh and a sandy beach. Interestingly, both multidrug-susceptible and multidrug-resistant C. auris isolates were found in the sample. Whole-genome sequencing analysis clustered the C. auris isolates into clade I, showing close similarity to other isolates from South Asia. Isolation of C. auris from the tropical coastal environment suggests its association with the marine ecosystem. The fact that viable C. auris was detected in the marine habitat confirms C. auris survival in harsh wetlands. However, the ecological significance of C. auris in salt marsh wetland and sandy beaches to human infections remains to be explored.IMPORTANCE Candida auris is a recently emerged multidrug-resistant fungal pathogen capable of causing severe infections in hospitalized patients. Despite its recognition as a human pathogen a decade ago, so far the natural ecological niche(s) of C. auris remains enigmatic. A previous hypothesis suggested that C. auris might be native to wetlands, that its emergence as a human pathogen might have been linked to global warming effects on wetlands, and that its enrichment in that ecological niche was favored by the ability of C. auris for thermal tolerance and salinity tolerance. To understand the mystery of environmental niches of C. auris, we explored the coastal wetland habitat around the very isolated Andaman Islands in the Indian Ocean. C. auris was isolated from the virgin habitats of salt marsh area with no human activity and from a sandy beach. C. auris isolation from the marine wetlands suggests that prior to its recognition as a human pathogen, it existed as an environmental fungus.Entities:
Keywords: Andaman Islands; Candida auris; India; ecology; marine environment; natural habitat; wetlands
Year: 2021 PMID: 33727354 PMCID: PMC8092279 DOI: 10.1128/mBio.03181-20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: mBio Impact factor: 7.867
FIG 1Map showing location of sampling sites (n = 8; sites E1 and E2 collectively depicted as E) of South Andaman district, Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Union Territory of India.
Description of study area locations and distribution of yeast species isolated from the South Andaman district (SAD), Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Union Territory of India
| Sampling location | Sampling station | Yeast species isolated (no. of colonies isolated) | Station description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Location I (South Andaman Island) | A (Chatham salt marsh) | Intertidal habitat along the east coast of SAD, characterized by marshy sediment on the abundant seagrass bed with seabirds; negligible human activity. | |
| B (Corbyn’s Cove) | Upper middle intertidal zone, east coast of SAD, a tourist beach with fine sand sediment | ||
| C (Burmanallah rocky shore) | Rocky shore, intertidal habitat, coarse sediment, rocky substratum with dead corals | ||
| D (Chidiyatapu) | Southernmost tip of SAD, surrounded by waters of Andaman Sea and Bay of Bengal, sediment comprised of granules and pebbles, coastal birds, crocodile-prone area, with fewer human activities | ||
| E1 (Wandoor) | West coast of SAD, crocodile-inhabited area, coastal birds, minimal human activity | ||
| E2 (Wandoor mangrove) | West coast of SAD | ||
| Location II (Swaraj Dweep Island) | F (Radhanagar) | None | Tourist beach |
| Location III (Shaheed Dweep Island) | G (Bharatpur) | Beach with water sports activities | |
Number of colonies isolated from the sediment suspension. Boldface highlights the isolation of C. auris from site A and site B.
Number of colonies isolated from the sediment suspension and seawater.
Hyaline mold.
FIG 2Representation of fluconazole susceptibility profile by spot assay on fluconazole-containing agar plates. Fluconazole concentrations used are depicted horizontally. Both fluconazole-susceptible (VPCI/E/AN/176/20) and -resistant (VPCI/E/AN/175/20) C. auris strains from site A and two resistant strains from site B (VPCI/E/AN/179/20 and VPCI/E/AN/180/20) of South Andaman District, Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Union Territory of India, were spot inoculated. The KCTC 17810 (clade II) strain of C. auris was used as a reference strain. Spots on the plate indicate growth of C. auris at that concentration.
FIG 3Maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree constructed based on whole-genome SNPs using RAxML. Included in the phylogenetic tree are 13 Candida auris strains isolated from South Andaman district, Andaman & Nicobar Islands (VPCI/E/AN/175/20 to AN/177/20 and VPCI/E/AN/179/20 to AN/188/20). Red text in the figure represents resistant strains (fluconazole geometric mean [GM] MIC, 256 mg/liter; amphotericin B GM MIC, 4 mg/liter) from both sites A and B, and the green text represents a single susceptible strain (fluconazole MIC, 8 mg/liter; amphotericin B MIC, 1 mg/liter) from site A. The remaining strains depicted include 9 recent isolates from patients and their immediate environments (VPCI/80/P/20 to VPCI/82/P/20, VPCI/E/41C/20, VPCI/E/25/20, VPCI/E/17W/20, VPCI/E/7LP/20, VPCI/E/3/20, and VPCI/83/P/20), 18 previously published Indian C. auris strains (B11200, B11201, B11205 to B11207, B11209, B11210, B11212 to B11218, VPCI/510/P/14, VPCI/692/P/12, VPCI/550/P/14, and VPCI/479/P/13), and reference clade I strain B8441 from Pakistan.