Biosciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA.
J Dent Res. 2020 Jun;99(6):613-620. doi: 10.1177/0022034520907380. Epub 2020 Feb 24.
The human oral cavity is one of the first environments where microbes have been discovered and studied since the dawn of microbiology. Nevertheless, approximately 200 types of bacteria from the oral microbiota have remained uncultured in the laboratory. Some are associated with a healthy oral microbial community, while others are linked to oral diseases, from dental caries to gum disease. Single-cell genomics has enabled inferences on the physiology, virulence, and evolution of such uncultured microorganisms and has further enabled isolation and cultivation of several novel oral bacteria, including the discovery of novel interspecies interactions. This review summarizes some of the more recent advances in this field, which is rapidly moving toward physiologic characterization of single cells and ultimately cultivation of the yet uncultured. A combination of traditional microbiological approaches with genomic-based physiologic predictions and isolation strategies may lead to the oral microbiome being the first complex microbial community to have all its members cultivable in the laboratory. Studying the biology of the individual microbes when in association with other members of the community, in controlled laboratory conditions and in vivo, should lead to a better understanding of oral dysbiosis and its prevention and reversion.
人类口腔是微生物学诞生以来最早发现和研究的环境之一。然而,口腔微生物群中仍有约 200 种细菌尚未在实验室中培养。其中一些与健康的口腔微生物群落有关,而另一些则与口腔疾病有关,从龋齿到牙周病。单细胞基因组学使我们能够推断出这些未培养微生物的生理学、毒力和进化,并进一步使几种新型口腔细菌得以分离和培养,包括发现新的种间相互作用。这篇综述总结了该领域的一些最新进展,该领域正迅速朝着单细胞生理学特征的描述和最终未培养细菌的培养方向发展。将基于基因组的生理学预测和分离策略与传统的微生物学方法相结合,可能会使口腔微生物组成为第一个所有成员都可在实验室中培养的复杂微生物群落。在实验室条件下和体内研究单个微生物与群落中其他成员关联时的生物学特性,应该会更好地理解口腔微生态失调及其预防和逆转。