Journal of Fungi (Aug 2019)

First Analysis of Human <i>Coccidioides</i> Isolates from New Mexico and the Southwest Four Corners Region: Implications for the Distributions of <i>C. posadasii</i> and <i>C. immitis</i> and Human Groups at Risk

  • Paris S. Hamm,
  • Miriam I. Hutchison,
  • Pascale Leonard,
  • Sandra Melman,
  • Donald O. Natvig

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jof5030074
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 3
p. 74

Abstract

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Coccidioidomycosis (Valley Fever) is a disease caused by species of Coccidioides. The disease is endemic to arid regions of the Southwestern US and while most common in CA and AZ is also present in NM. We present the first genetic analysis of clinical isolates from NM. Travel and demographic information was available for a number of patients, which included individuals from NM and the Southwestern US Four Corners region. Multi-gene phylogenetic analyses revealed the presence of both C. posadasii and C. immitis. While NM is predicted to be within the endemic range for C. posadasii, our results expand the known range of C. immitis, often considered to be the “California species”. Five of eight infections for which patient ethnicity existed occurred in Native Americans, and two occurred in African Americans. Several isolates came from the northwestern part of NM—outside the predicted “highly-endemic” region. Our study suggests Native Americans represent an unrecognized at-risk group, and it provides a foundation for better defining the geographic distribution of the Coccidioides species and for preventing exposure among populations at risk. In the course of this study, we developed a reliable PCR-based method to distinguish species targeting regions of the mitochondrial genome.

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