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Title: Diversity and antifungal susceptibilities of yeasts from mangroves in Hong Kong, China : a one health aspect
Authors: Hau, PT 
Shiu, A 
Tam, EWT
Chau, ECT 
Murillo, M 
Humer, E 
Po, WW 
Yu, RCW 
Fung, J 
Seto, SW 
Tsang, CC
Chow, FWN 
Issue Date: Oct-2024
Source: Journal of fungi, Oct. 2024, v. 10, no. 10, 728
Abstract: While mangrove ecosystems are rich in biodiversity, they are increasingly impacted by climate change and urban pollutants. The current study provides first insights into the emergence of potentially pathogenic yeasts in Hong Kong’s mangroves. Sediment and water samples were collected from ten urban and rural mangroves sites. Initial CHROMagarTM Candida Plus screening, representing the first application of this differential medium for water and soil samples collected from a non-clinical environment, enabled the rapid, preliminary phenotypic identification of yeast isolates from mangroves. Subsequent molecular profiling (ITS and/or 28S nrDNA sequencing) and antifungal drug susceptibility tests were conducted to further elucidate yeast diversity and drug resistance. A diversity of yeasts, including 45 isolates of 18 distinct species across 13 genera/clades, was isolated from sediments and waters from Hong Kong mangroves. Molecular profiling revealed a dominance of the Candida/Lodderomyces clade (44.4%), a group of notorious opportunistic pathogens. The findings also reveal a rich biodiversity of non-Candida/Lodderomyces yeasts in mangroves, including the first reported presence of Apiotrichum domesticum and Crinitomyces flavificans. A potentially novel Yamadazyma species was also discovered. Remarkably, 14.3% of the ubiquitous Candida parapsilosis isolates displayed resistance to multiple antifungal drugs, suggesting that mangroves may be reservoirs of multi-drug resistance. Wildlife, especially migratory birds, may disseminate these hidden threats. With significant knowledge gaps regarding the environmental origins, drug resistance, and public health impacts of pathogenic yeasts, urgent surveillance is needed from a One Health perspective. This study provides an early warning that unrestrained urbanization can unleash resistant pathogens from coastal ecosystems globally. It underscores the necessity for enhanced surveillance studies and interdisciplinary collaboration between clinicians, ornithologists, and environmental microbiologists to effectively monitor and manage this environmental health risk, ensuring the maintenance of ‘One Health’.
Keywords: Antifungal drug susceptibility tests
CHROMagar Candida Plus
Mangrove
Multi-drug resistance
One health
Pathogenic yeasts
Publisher: MDPI AG
Journal: Journal of fungi 
EISSN: 2309-608X
DOI: 10.3390/jof10100728
Rights: Copyright: © 2024 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
The following publication Hau, P.-T., Shiu, A., Tam, E. W.-T., Chau, E. C.-T., Murillo, M., Humer, E., Po, W.-W., Yu, R. C.-W., Fung, J., Seto, S.-W., Tsang, C.-C., & Chow, F. W.-N. (2024). Diversity and Antifungal Susceptibilities of Yeasts from Mangroves in Hong Kong, China—A One Health Aspect. Journal of Fungi, 10(10), 728 is available at https://doi.org/10.3390/jof10100728.
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