Zeitschriftenaufsatz
|
2025
Evolving spectrum of Pneumocystis host specificity, genetic diversity, and evolution
Autor:in
Ma, Liang; Weissenbacher-Lang, Christiane; Latinne, Alice; Babb-Biernacki, Spenser J.; Blasi, Barbara; Cissé, Ousmane; Kovacs, Joseph A.
Publikationen als Autor:in / Herausgeber:in der Vetmeduni
Journal
Abstrakt
Following over a century's worth of research, our understanding of Pneumocystis has significantly expanded in various facets, spanning from its fundamental biology to its impacts on animal and human health. Its significance in public health has been underscored by its inclusion in the 2022 WHO fungal priority pathogens list. We present this review to summarize pivotal advancements in Pneumocystis epidemiology, host specificity, genetic diversity and evolution. Following a concise discussion of Pneumocystis species classification and divergence at the species and strain levels, we devoted the main focus to the following aspects: the epidemiological characteristics of Pneumocystis across nearly 260 mammal species, the increasing recognition of coinfection involving multiple Pneumocystis species in the same host species, the diminishing host specificity of Pneumocystis among closely related host species, and the intriguingly discordant evolution of certain Pneumocystis species with their host species. A comprehensive understanding of host specificity, genetic diversity, and evolution of Pneumocystis can provide important insights into pathogenic mechanisms and transmission modes. This, in turn, holds the potential to facilitate the development of innovative strategies for the prevention and control of Pneumocystis infection.
The review delves into advancements at the forefront of Pneumocystis epidemiology, host specificity, and evolution, with a focus on new developments that challenge the long-standing prevailing belief in its strict adherence to host specificity and coevolution with respective host species.
Schlagwörter
Pneumocystis; epidemiology; genetic diversity; host specificity; evolution; cross-species infection; coinfection
Dokumententyp
Übersichtsarbeit
ISSN/eISSN
0168-6445 - 1574-6976
WoS ID
PubMed ID