Dandruff-Causing Skin Fungi Discovered Unexpectedly in Deep Sea Vents, Antarctica
Malassezia lipophilis by Janice Haney Carr. CDC Public Health Image Library Image 218. Public domain.
Until relatively recently, the fungus was thought to have one favorite home: us. As the dominant fungus on human skin and sometimes-cause of dandruff, the yeast was thought to live a simple if sometimes irritating domestic existence humbly mooching off the oils we exude.
No more. Thanks to the efforts of scientists over the last 10 years, we have discovered that our sweet little skin fungus is actually a cosmpolitan extremophile as at home on your scalp as in deep-sea sediments, hydrothermal vents, stony corals, lobster larvae guts, Japanese eel gut and muscle tissue, Antarctic soils, the exoskeleton of soil , and various plant roots including orchids, who are known for being picky about their root fungi.
The ribosomal DNA sequences — sections often used to gauge relatedness of species — of the in all these places is “nearly identical” to that found on humans. In the figure below from , the human sequences are a pea-soupy yellow, and you can see how they are interspersed with oceanic environmental sequences. The sequences labeled with black stars at right share 99% or greater identity to , a human “skin associate”.
Fig. 1 from Amend 2014. Click for source.
Anthony Amend, a scientist in the Department of Botany at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, who wrote the review, believes this suggests either that all these fungi only recently evolved into their niches, or that this fungus is mind bogglingly tolerant of the worst that Earth has to offer (I’d put my money on the latter). It further suggests, he says, that the fungi have repeatedly moved from land to sea and back, a pattern that surprisingly is not unusual of other marine fungi and yeasts. Fungi might be especially suited to do this thanks to their (KI-tin) cell walls (chitin is also used, in a great evolutionary coincidence, to make the shells of crustaceans and insects), which would protect the cells from the pressure and salinity of the deep ocean.
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