A
ubiquitous(普遍存在的) skin
fungus1 linked to
dandruff(头皮屑),
eczema(湿疹) and other itchy, flaky maladies in humans has now been tracked to even further global reaches -- including Hawaiian coral reefs and the extreme environments of arctic soils and deep sea
vents3. A review in the scientific journal PLOS Pathogens considers the diversity, ecology, and distribution of the
fungi4 of the genus Malassezia in light of new insights gained from screening environmental sequencing datasets from around the world.
University of Hawai'i at Mānoa scientist Anthony
Amend5 discovered that members of this genus
encompass6 a species and
ecological7 diversity far greater than
previously8 credited, and appear to have
diversified9 repeatedly into and out of
marine10 environments. Until recently, these fungi were assumed to have evolved to inhabit mammalian skin.
"We have found multiple new examples of these fungi on corals, sponges and
algae11 and in water samples, deep sea
thermal12 vents and
sediments13 from Hawai'i and around the world," Amend said. "Equally as
remarkable14, a single strain of the
noted15 human associate, Malassezia restricta, is found in some of the most extreme and disconnected habitats on the planet, including arctic soils and hydrothermal vents."
Scratching your head yet? We're not the only ones. Marine mammals like seals, as well as fish,
lobsters16, sponges,
plankton17, and corals
apparently18 also have that Malassezia
itch2. In fact, the fungus appears to dominate certain marine environments.
Emerging evidence even suggests that an interaction with warming ocean waters is linked to a reef banding disease observed at Palmyra Atoll for which a new Malassezia is
implicated19.
"Residence in such a broad range of habitats is exceptional and clearly ranks this dandruff-causing fungus as one of the most ecologically diverse on the planet," Amend said. "Marine Malassezia should most certainly be the focus of future research into the diversity and distribution of this enigmatic group."