Call for Renaming India-Linked Fungus
- January 14, 2025
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Call for Renaming India-Linked Fungus
Sub : Sci
Sec: Health
Why in News
- A group of dermatologists from 14 countries, including India and Germany, has raised concerns about the regional naming of a novel fungal species, Trichophyton indotineae, which causes hard-to-treat skin infections. The naming practice, they argue, promotes prejudice and misinformation, contradicting global guidelines by health organizations.
Trichophyton indotineae:
- Identified in 2020 by Japanese dermatologists in patients from India and Nepal.
- Named following a historical practice of linking infectious agents to specific locations.
- Initially categorized as a variant of Trichophyton mentagrophytes, termed Internal Transcribed Spacer (ITS) genotype VIII/T. interdigitale.
- Cases have been reported across multiple continents, including Europe, the Middle East, North America, and Asia, often linked to travel and migration from South Asia.
- Predominantly transmitted through person-to-person contact, including skin-to-skin interactions and shared personal items.
- Emerging evidence suggests possible transmission through sexual contact.
- Causes inflammatory and pruritic dermatophytosis, commonly affecting the groin, gluteal region, trunk, and face.
- Notably exhibits high levels of resistance to terbinafine, a common antifungal medication, due to mutations in the squalene epoxidase gene.
- The fungus has been detected in over 40 countries, making it a global health concern.
Concerns Raised by the Dermatologists:
- Naming infectious agents after locations fosters stigma, racial prejudice, and misinformation.
- It contradicts guidelines by: World Health Organization (WHO)
- The naming was based on isolates from only two patients—one Indian and one Nepalese—rendering the designation scientifically unsubstantiated.
- The origin of the fungus remains unclear, making a region-specific name inappropriate.
Internal Transcribed Spacer:
- It serves as a genetic marker for species identification and phylogenetic analysis, particularly in fungi.
- Found in the ribosomal RNA gene cluster.
- Does not code for proteins but helps regulate rRNA production.
- High variability between species makes ITS an ideal region for distinguishing fungal species.
- Used in molecular diagnostics to accurately identify fungi, including Trichophyton indotineae.