Oral Infection and Immunity Branch, National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA.
J Bacteriol. 2010 Jun;192(12):2965-72. doi: 10.1128/JB.01631-09. Epub 2010 Feb 12.
Human dental biofilm communities comprise several species, which can interact cooperatively or competitively. Bacterial interactions influence biofilm formation, metabolic changes, and physiological function of the community. Lactic acid, a common metabolite of oral bacteria, was measured in the flow cell effluent of one-, two- and three-species communities growing on saliva as the sole nutritional source. We investigated single-species and multispecies colonization by using known initial, early, middle, and late colonizers of enamel. Fluorescent-antibody staining and image analysis were used to quantify the biomass in saliva-fed flow cells. Of six species tested, only the initial colonizer Actinomyces oris exhibited significant growth. The initial colonizer Streptococcus oralis produced lactic acid but showed no significant growth. The early colonizer Veillonella sp. utilized lactic acid in two- and three-species biofilm communities. The biovolumes of all two-species biofilms increased when Veillonella sp. was present as one of the partners, indicating that this early colonizer promotes mutualistic community development. All three-species combinations exhibited enhanced growth except one, i.e., A. oris, Veillonella sp., and the middle colonizer Porphyromonas gingivalis, indicating specificity among three-species communities. Further specificity was seen when Fusobacterium nucleatum (a middle colonizer), Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans (a late colonizer), and P. gingivalis did not grow with S. oralis in two-species biofilms, but inclusion of Veillonella sp. resulted in growth of all three-species combinations. We propose that commensal veillonellae use lactic acid for growth in saliva and that they communicate metabolically with initial, early, middle, and late colonizers to establish multispecies communities on enamel.
人类口腔生物膜群落包含多种物种,这些物种可以相互合作或竞争。细菌之间的相互作用会影响生物膜的形成、代谢变化和群落的生理功能。乳酸是口腔细菌的一种常见代谢产物,我们在以唾液为唯一营养来源的单一种群、两种种群和三种种群生物膜的流动池流出物中测量了乳酸。我们通过使用已知的釉质初始、早期、中期和晚期定植菌来研究单种和多种定植。荧光抗体染色和图像分析用于定量唾液喂养流动池中生物量。在测试的六种物种中,只有初始定植菌放线菌(Actinomyces oris)表现出显著生长。早期定植菌链球菌(Streptococcus oralis)产生乳酸,但没有明显生长。早期定植菌韦荣氏球菌(Veillonella sp.)在两种和三种生物膜群落中利用乳酸。当韦荣氏球菌作为其中一个伙伴存在时,所有两种生物膜的生物体积都增加,表明这种早期定植菌促进了共生群落的发展。除一种情况外,所有三种组合都表现出增强的生长,即放线菌(A. oris)、韦荣氏球菌(Veillonella sp.)和中间定植菌牙龈卟啉单胞菌(Porphyromonas gingivalis),这表明三种生物膜群落之间存在特异性。当中间定植菌核梭杆菌(Fusobacterium nucleatum)、晚期定植菌伴放线放线杆菌(Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans)和牙龈卟啉单胞菌(P. gingivalis)不能与链球菌(S. oralis)在两种生物膜中共生时,会看到进一步的特异性,但当包含韦荣氏球菌(Veillonella sp.)时,所有三种生物膜组合都会生长。我们提出,共生韦荣氏球菌利用乳酸在唾液中生长,并且它们在代谢上与初始、早期、中期和晚期定植菌进行交流,从而在釉质上建立多种物种群落。