Breakthrough Study: Albumin Emerges as Key Defender Against Deadly Fungal Infection Mucormycosis

January 17, 2026
Breakthrough Study: Albumin Emerges as Key Defender Against Deadly Fungal Infection Mucormycosis
  • A multidisciplinary study led by researchers from IMBB-FORTH and the University of Crete, with collaborators across Europe, the U.S., and India, reveals a protective role for albumin against the fungal infection mucormycosis, with findings published in Nature.

  • The research shows that Mucorales fungi exhibit increased fatty acid oxidation in patient sera, while albumin-bound free fatty acids suppress fungal protein synthesis, contributing to reduced virulence in animal models.

  • Clinically, patients with mucormycosis have significantly lower albumin levels, and hypoalbuminemia emerges as the strongest predictor of poor outcomes across multiple continents.

  • Experimentally, albumin inhibits the growth of Mucorales, and removing albumin from healthy blood enables fungal growth; albumin administration restores resistance in mice.

  • Overall, the results point to a novel host-defense role for albumin and suggest potential therapeutic uses of albumin to prevent or treat mucormycosis, a disease with limited current treatment options.

  • Mucormycosis is a rapidly progressing, high-mortality infection caused by Mucorales fungi, commonly linked to weakened immunity, malnutrition, or diabetes, and it can cause tissue damage and blackening of skin.

  • Publication details: Antonis Pikoulas et al., Albumin orchestrates a natural host defence mechanism against mucormycosis, Nature, 2026, DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09882-3.

  • The antifungal mechanism hinges on fatty acids bound to albumin; these FFAs resist oxidation, enter the fungus, and block expression of genes essential for growth, thereby restraining virulence.

Summary based on 1 source


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