Insights into the Unique Nature of the East Asian Clade of the Emerging Pathogenic Yeast Candida auris
- PMID: 30760535
- PMCID: PMC6440783
- DOI: 10.1128/JCM.00007-19
Insights into the Unique Nature of the East Asian Clade of the Emerging Pathogenic Yeast Candida auris
Abstract
The emerging yeast Candida auris can be highly drug resistant, causing invasive infections, and large outbreaks. C. auris went from an unknown pathogen a decade ago to being reported in over thirty countries on six continents. C. auris consists of four discrete clades, based on where the first isolates of the clade were reported, South Asian (clade I), East Asian (clade II), African (clade III), and South American (clade IV). These clades have unique genetic and biochemical characteristics that are important to understand and inform the global response to C. auris Clade II has been underrepresented in the literature despite being the first one discovered. In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Microbiology, Y. J. Kwon et al. (J Clin Microbiol 57:e01624-18, 2019, https://doi.org/10.1128/JCM.01624-18) describe the largest collection of clinical isolates from Clade II, which is also the longest-running span of clinical cases, 20 years, from any single region to date. Clade II appears to have a propensity for the ear that is uncharacteristic of the other clades, which typically cause invasive infections and large-scale outbreaks. This study provides new information on an understudied lineage of C. auris and has important implications for future surveillance.
This is a work of the U.S. Government and is not subject to copyright protection in the United States. Foreign copyrights may apply.
Comment on
- https://doi.org/10.1128/JCM.01624-18
References
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