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Fungal diversity in the soil Mycobiome: Implications for ONE health

Andreas Yiallouris, Zoi Dorothea Pana, Giorgos Marangos, Ioanna Tzyrka, Spyridon Karanasios, Iliana Georgiou, Kyriaki Kontopyrgia, Eleni Triantafyllou, Danila Seidel, Oliver A. Cornely, Elizabeth O. Johnson, Stavros Panagiotou, Charalampos Filippou

2024One Health31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Today, over 300 million individuals worldwide are afflicted by severe fungal infections, many of whom will perish. Fungi, as a result of their plastic genomes have the ability to adapt to new environments and extreme conditions as a consequence of globalization, including urbanization, agricultural intensification, and, notably, climate change. Soils and the impact of these anthropogenic environmental factors can be the source of pathogenic and non-pathogenic fungi and subsequent fungal threats to public health. This underscores the growing understanding that not only is fungal diversity in the soil mycobiome a critical component of a functioning ecosystem, but also that soil microbial communities can significantly contribute to plant, animal, and human health, as underscored by the One Health concept. Collectively, this stresses the importance of investigating the soil microbiome in order to gain a deeper understanding of soil fungal ecology and its interplay with the rhizosphere microbiome, which carries significant implications for human health, animal health and environmental health.

Topics & Concepts

MicrobiomeEcologyBiologySoil healthEcosystemRhizosphereFungal DiversityAgriculturePublic healthSoil fungiHuman healthMicrobial ecologyEnvironmental healthGeographyEnvironmental resource managementSoil waterEnvironmental scienceMedicineAgronomySoil organic matterGeneticsBacteriaBioinformaticsNursingGut microbiota and healthPlant Pathogens and Fungal DiseasesPlant-Microbe Interactions and Immunity
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