Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, Duke Universitygrid.26009.3d Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
mBio. 2022 Jun 28;13(3):e0073922. doi: 10.1128/mbio.00739-22. Epub 2022 May 16.
The continuous emergence of antifungal drug resistance is a mounting concern for the treatment of fungal infections worldwide. While many pathogenic fungi exhibit some level of antifungal drug resistance, the identification of Candida auris has brought this phenomenon to the fore in recent years. C. auris exhibits resistance to all antifungal drugs used for treatment, and it does so at a very high rate, with more than 90% of isolates being resistant to at least one drug and roughly 4% being panresistant. However, the environmental factors driving this exceptionally high antifungal drug resistance remain unidentified. The presence of C. auris on stored apples that are treated with antifungals during storage suggests a possible route to selection of drug-resistant C. auris isolates that may have contributed to the evolution of this deadly pathogen. This study further suggests that the adage "an apple a day keeps the doctor away" may need to be revisited in light of the discovery of C. auris on the surface of apples.
抗真菌药物耐药性的不断出现是全球真菌感染治疗的一个日益严重的问题。虽然许多致病性真菌都表现出一定程度的抗真菌药物耐药性,但近年来,耳念珠菌的出现使这一现象引起了人们的关注。耳念珠菌对所有用于治疗的抗真菌药物都具有耐药性,其耐药率非常高,超过 90%的分离株至少对一种药物耐药,约 4%的分离株对所有药物耐药。然而,导致这种异常高的抗真菌药物耐药性的环境因素仍未确定。在储存过程中用抗真菌剂处理的储存苹果上存在耳念珠菌,这表明可能存在一种选择耐药性耳念珠菌分离株的途径,这可能促成了这种致命病原体的进化。本研究进一步表明,鉴于在苹果表面发现了耳念珠菌,“一天一苹果,医生远离我”这句谚语可能需要重新审视。