Chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis, familial type 6 (Candidiasis, familial 6) is a very rare, primary immunodeficiency disorder with impaired immune responses to fungal infections, selectively against Candida. The disease is characterized by persistent and/or recurrent infections of the skin, nails and mucous membranes caused by organisms of the Candida genus (mainly Candida albicans). The cause is a mutation in the IL17F gene.
Members of the interleukin-17 (IL-17) family as well as interleukin-22 (IL-22) are cytokines produced by type 17 lymphocytes. Both cytokines mediate antifungal immunity. They act synergistically but activate quite different downstream signaling pathways (Aggor FEY et al. 2020).