Delaney Christopher, O'Donnell Lindsay E, Kean Ryan, Sherry Leighann, Brown Jason L, Calvert Gareth, Nile Christopher J, Cross Laura, Bradshaw David J, Brandt Bernd W, Robertson Douglas, Ramage Gordon
Oral Sciences Research Group, Glasgow Dental School, School of Medicine, Dentistry and Nursing, College of Medicine, Veterinary and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, 378 Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow, G2 3JZ, UK.
Department of Biological and Biomedical Sciences, School of Health and Life Sciences, Glasgow Caledonian University, Glasgow, UK.
Biofilm. 2019 Dec;1:100002. doi: 10.1016/j.bioflm.2019.100002.
Evidence to support the role of species in oral disease is limited. Often considered a commensal, this opportunistic yeast has been shown to play a role in denture related disease, though whether it is an active participant or innocent bystander remains to be determined. This study sought to understand the role of species alongside the bacterial microbiome in a denture patient cohort, exploring how the microbiology of the denture was affected by oral hygiene practices.
In vitro denture cleansing studies were performed on a complex 9-species interkingdom denture biofilm model, with quantitative assessment of retained bacterial and fungal viable bioburdens. Patient hygiene measures were also collected from 131 patients, including OHIP, frequency of denture cleansing, oral hygiene measure and patient demographics. The bacterial microbiome was analysed from each patient, alongside quantitative PCR assessment of ITS (fungal) and 16S (bacterial) bioburden from denture, mucosa and intact dentition.
It was shown that following in vitro cleansing were unresponsive to treatment, whereas bacterial biofilms could repopulate 100-fold, but were susceptible to subsequent treatment. Within the patient cohort, oral hygiene did not impact candidal or bacterial composition, nor diversity. The levels of did not significantly influence the bacterial microbiome, though an observed gradient was suggestive of a microbial composition change in response to load, indicating interkingdom interaction rather than an oral hygiene effect. Indeed, correlation analysis was able to show significant correlations between species and key genera ().
Overall, this study has shown that the denture microbiome/mycobiome is relatively resilient to oral hygiene challenges, but that species have potential interactions with key oral genera. These interactions may have a bearing on shaping community structure and a shift from health to disease when the opportunity arises.
支持该菌种在口腔疾病中作用的证据有限。这种机会性酵母通常被认为是共生菌,已被证明在与义齿相关的疾病中起作用,但其是积极参与者还是无辜旁观者仍有待确定。本研究旨在了解该菌种在义齿患者队列中与细菌微生物群的作用,探讨义齿微生物群如何受到口腔卫生习惯的影响。
在一个复杂的9菌种跨界义齿生物膜模型上进行体外义齿清洁研究,对残留的细菌和真菌活生物负荷进行定量评估。还收集了131名患者的个人卫生措施,包括口腔健康影响程度量表、义齿清洁频率、口腔卫生措施和患者人口统计学信息。分析了每位患者的细菌微生物群,同时对义齿、黏膜和完整牙列中的内转录间隔区(真菌)和16S(细菌)生物负荷进行定量聚合酶链反应评估。
结果表明,体外清洁后,该菌种对治疗无反应,而细菌生物膜可重新繁殖100倍,但对后续治疗敏感。在患者队列中,口腔卫生并未影响念珠菌或细菌的组成及多样性。该菌种的水平并未显著影响细菌微生物群,尽管观察到的梯度表明微生物组成因该菌种负荷而发生变化,这表明存在跨界相互作用而非口腔卫生影响。事实上,相关性分析能够显示该菌种与关键菌属之间存在显著相关性。
总体而言,本研究表明义齿微生物群/真菌微生物群对口腔卫生挑战具有相对抗性,但该菌种与关键口腔菌属存在潜在相互作用。这些相互作用可能对群落结构的形成有影响,并有机会导致从健康状态转变为疾病状态。