Valley fever is named for California’s San Joaquin Valley, but the fungus that causes the disease actually originated in Arizona. That finding is the result of genetic testing performed by Flagstaff scientists.
Scientists at the Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen) tracked the origins of Valley Fever with genetic sequencing, to help predict how the disease might spread.
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It’s caused by a fungus found in desert soils and affects thousands of people each year.
David Engelthaler, the study’s lead author, said the Arizona species of the fungus is almost 1 million years old.
“The populations of this fungus in southern Arizona seem to be the oldest populations, and that’s likely where Coccidioides — that’s the name of the fungus — first really emerged and started to radiate,” he said.
Valley fever spores likely migrated from Arizona to California after the Central Valley drained its ancient inland sea. There the fungus diverged into a separate species.
Valley fever is now found in Mexico, parts of Central and South America and most recently Washington state. Engelthaler thinks animals carry it to new locations.
The study appeared in mBioearlier this month.