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      Vertebrate Endothermy Restricts Most Fungi as Potential Pathogens

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      The Journal of Infectious Diseases
      University of Chicago Press

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          Abstract

          The paucity of fungal diseases in mammals relative to insects, amphibians, and plants is puzzling. We analyzed the thermal tolerance of 4802 fungal strains from 144 genera and found that most cannot grow at mammalian temperatures. Fungi from insects and mammals had greater thermal tolerances than did isolates from soils and plants. Every 1 degrees C increase in the 30 degrees C-40 degrees C range excluded an additional 6% of fungal isolates, implying that fever could significantly increase the thermal exclusion zone. Mammalian endothermy and homeothermy are potent nonspecific defenses against most fungi that could have provided a strong evolutionary survival advantage against fungal diseases.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          The Journal of Infectious Diseases
          J INFECT DIS
          University of Chicago Press
          0022-1899
          1537-6613
          November 15 2009
          November 15 2009
          : 200
          : 10
          : 1623-1626
          Article
          10.1086/644642
          19827944
          a640a64b-2939-41cb-84dd-5a0b79c54079
          © 2009
          History

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