Shi Baochen, Wu Tingxi, McLean Jeffrey, Edlund Anna, Young Youngik, He Xuesong, Lv Hongyang, Zhou Xuedong, Shi Wenyuan, Li Huiying, Lux Renate
Department of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology, Crump Institute for Molecular Imaging, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of Los Angeles at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, USA.
School of Dentistry, University of Los Angeles at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, USA.
mSphere. 2016 Dec 28;1(6). doi: 10.1128/mSphere.00215-16. eCollection 2016 Nov-Dec.
While investigation of the microbiome on natural oral surfaces has generated a wealth of information, few studies have examined the microbial communities colonizing dentures and their relationship to oral health. To address this knowledge gap, we characterized the bacterial community associated with dentures and remaining teeth in healthy individuals and patients with denture stomatitis. The microbiome compositions of matched denture and tooth plaque samples of 10 healthy individuals and 9 stomatitis patients were determined by 16S rRNA gene pyrosequencing. The microbial communities colonizing dentures and remaining teeth in health and disease were very similar to each other. Matched denture and tooth samples from the same individuals shared a significantly higher percentage of identical phylotypes than random pairs of samples from different study participants. Despite these overall similarities, several bacterial phylotypes displayed discrete health- and stomatitis-associated denture colonization, while others were distinct in health and disease independently of the surface. Certain phylotypes exhibited differential colonization of dentures and teeth independently of denture health status. In conclusion, denture and natural tooth surfaces in health and stomatitis harbor similar bacterial communities. Individual-related rather than surface-specific factors play a significant role in the bacterial phylotype composition colonizing dentures and teeth. This individual-specific mutual influence on denture and tooth surface colonization could be an important factor in maintaining oral health in denture wearers. Discrete differences in colonization patterns for distinct genera and phylotypes warrant further studies regarding their potential involvement or utility as specific indicators of health and disease development in denture-wearing individuals. Denture stomatitis is a prevalent inflammatory condition of the mucosal tissue in denture wearers that is triggered by microorganisms. While has been extensively studied for its role in stomatitis etiology, the bacterial component largely remains to be investigated. Our data show that certain types of bacteria are significantly associated with denture health and disease. Furthermore, the bacterial communities residing on the teeth and dentures of the same person are similar to each other independently of the surface, and thus, denture health could impact the maintenance of remaining teeth and vice versa.
虽然对天然口腔表面微生物群的研究已产生了丰富的信息,但很少有研究考察定植在假牙上的微生物群落及其与口腔健康的关系。为填补这一知识空白,我们对健康个体和患有义齿性口炎的患者中与假牙及留存牙齿相关的细菌群落进行了特征分析。通过16S rRNA基因焦磷酸测序确定了10名健康个体和9名口炎患者的配对假牙和牙菌斑样本的微生物群组成。在健康和患病状态下定植在假牙和留存牙齿上的微生物群落彼此非常相似。来自同一人的配对假牙和牙齿样本比来自不同研究参与者的随机样本对共享的相同系统发育型百分比显著更高。尽管有这些总体相似性,但几种细菌系统发育型表现出与健康和口炎相关的假牙定植情况不同,而其他一些在健康和患病状态下与表面无关而有所不同。某些系统发育型在假牙和牙齿上的定植情况不同,与假牙健康状况无关。总之,健康和口炎状态下的假牙和天然牙齿表面含有相似的细菌群落。个体相关而非表面特异性因素在定植于假牙和牙齿上的细菌系统发育型组成中起重要作用。这种假牙和牙齿表面定植的个体特异性相互影响可能是维持假牙佩戴者口腔健康的一个重要因素。不同属和系统发育型在定植模式上的离散差异值得进一步研究其在假牙佩戴个体的健康和疾病发展中作为特定指标的潜在参与情况或效用。义齿性口炎是假牙佩戴者黏膜组织普遍存在的一种炎症性疾病,由微生物引发。虽然其在口炎病因学中的作用已得到广泛研究,但其细菌成分在很大程度上仍有待研究。我们的数据表明,某些类型的细菌与假牙健康和疾病显著相关。此外,同一个人的牙齿和假牙上的细菌群落彼此相似,与表面无关,因此,假牙健康可能会影响留存牙齿的维持,反之亦然。