Roberts A, Matthews J B, Socransky S S, Freestone P P E, Williams P H, Chapple I L C
Unit of Periodontology, Birmingham School of Dentistry, Birmingham, UK.
Oral Microbiol Immunol. 2002 Oct;17(5):296-303. doi: 10.1034/j.1399-302x.2002.170506.x.
Microorganisms possess the ability to recognize hormones within the host and utilize them to adapt to their surroundings. Noradrenaline and adrenaline, which are released during human stress responses, may act as environmental cues to alter the growth of individual organisms within subgingival biofilms. The aims of this study were to modify, for anaerobic culture, existing methodology used in determining microorganism catecholamine responses and to investigate the growth responses to noradrenaline and adrenaline of 43 microorganisms found within subgingival microbial complexes. We established initial inocula for each strain using anaerobic culture, re-inoculated into a minimal serum-based medium and grown anaerobically at 35 degrees C. We assessed organism growth by optical density (OD(600nm)) readings, with test and control cultures performed in triplicate. Test cultures were supplemented with 50 microm noradrenaline or 100 microm adrenaline. We observed significant growth effects for supplementation with noradrenaline (20 species responding positively) and adrenaline (27 species responding positively), with differences in growth response observed within bacterial species and within and between microbial complexes. The most pronounced positive growth effects of noradrenaline were demonstrated in Actinomyces naeslundii (+ 49.4%), Actinomyces gerenscseriae (+ 57.2%), Eikenella corrodens (+ 143.3%) and Campylobacter gracilis (+ 79.9%). We also observed inhibitory effects of noradrenaline supplementation for Porphyromonas gingivalis (- 11.9%) and Bacteroides forsythus (- 22.2%). Responses to adrenaline tended to mirror the responses seen with noradrenaline. Individual organisms from different microbial complexes vary in their in vitro growth responses to noradrenaline and adrenaline. Such variation may influence the in vivo composition of the subgingival biofilm in response to stress-induced changes in local catecholamine levels and play a significant role in the aetiology and pathogenesis of the periodontal diseases.
微生物具有识别宿主体内激素并利用它们来适应周围环境的能力。去甲肾上腺素和肾上腺素在人类应激反应期间释放,可能作为环境信号改变龈下生物膜内单个生物体的生长。本研究的目的是针对厌氧培养,改进用于确定微生物儿茶酚胺反应的现有方法,并研究龈下微生物复合体中发现的43种微生物对去甲肾上腺素和肾上腺素的生长反应。我们使用厌氧培养为每个菌株建立初始接种物,重新接种到基于血清的基本培养基中,并在35℃厌氧培养。我们通过光密度(OD(600nm))读数评估生物体生长,测试和对照培养物均一式三份进行。测试培养物补充50微摩尔去甲肾上腺素或100微摩尔肾上腺素。我们观察到补充去甲肾上腺素(20种呈阳性反应)和肾上腺素(27种呈阳性反应)有显著的生长效应,在细菌种类以及微生物复合体内部和之间观察到生长反应的差异。去甲肾上腺素最明显的正向生长效应在内氏放线菌(+49.4%)、杰氏放线菌(+57.2%)、腐蚀埃肯菌(+143.3%)和纤细弯曲菌(+79.9%)中得到证实。我们还观察到补充去甲肾上腺素对牙龈卟啉单胞菌(-11.9%)和福赛坦氏菌(-22.2%)有抑制作用。对肾上腺素的反应倾向于反映去甲肾上腺素的反应。来自不同微生物复合体的单个生物体对去甲肾上腺素和肾上腺素的体外生长反应各不相同。这种差异可能会影响龈下生物膜的体内组成,以应对局部儿茶酚胺水平因应激而发生的变化,并在牙周疾病的病因学和发病机制中发挥重要作用。