The Human Mycobiome

  1. Patrick C. Seed
  1. Departments of Pediatrics, Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, and Surgery, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina 27710
  1. Correspondence: patrick.seed{at}duke.edu

Abstract

Fungi are fundamental to the human microbiome, the collection of microbes distributed across and within the body, and the microbiome has been shown, in total, to modify fundamental human physiology, including energy acquisition, vitamin-cofactor availability, xenobiotic metabolism, immune development and function, and even neurological development and behavior. Here, a comprehensive review of current knowledge about the mycobiome, the collective of fungi within the microbiome, highlights methods for its study, diversity between body sites, and dynamics during human development, health, and disease. Early-stage studies show interactions between the mycobiome and other microbes, with host physiology, and in pathogenic and mutualistic phenotypes. Current research portends a vital role for the mycobiome in human health and disease.

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