Abstract

ABSTRACT Riverine fungi have the capacity for both pathogenicity, pertinent for countries with elevated immunosuppressed individuals, and bioremediation potential. The purpose was (i) to screen for the presence of clinically relevant riverine fungi and associations with anthropogenic influence, and (ii) the acclimatisation of environmental communities toward potential bioremediation application. Communities were harvested from polluted rivers in Stellenbosch, South Africa, and mycobiomes characterised by high-throughput amplicon sequencing. The remainder of the biomass was inoculated into continuous bioreactors with filtered river water or sterile minimal medium. Seven weeks later, the mycobiomes were re-sequenced. At least nine clinically relevant species were detected, including agents of mycoses belonging to the genus Candida. The occurrence of genera that harbour opportunisticstrains was significantly higher (P = 0.04) at more polluted sites. Moreover, positive correlations occured between some genera and pollution indices, demonstrating the potential of fungi for addition to water quality indicators. Despite biomass increase, almost all pathogens were undetectable after seven weeks, demonstrating less resilience in conditions mimicking rivers. Thus, when screening riverine biomes for bioremediation potential, ambient reactors select against human pathogens. This indicates a transient introduction of allochthonous opportunistic species into rivers due to insufficient sanitation, and the potential of bioremediation strategies that selects for environmental rather than pathogenic traits..

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