Jiang Song, Nie Jie, Chen Yu Xing, Wang Xiao Yan, Chen Feng
Chin J Dent Res. 2022 Jun 10;25(2):107-118. doi: 10.3290/j.cjdr.b3086339.
To investigate the composition and abundance of candidate phyla radiation (CPR) in the oral cavity in caries patients and a healthy population.
The raw macrogenomic sequencing data for a total of 88 subjects were downloaded from the National Centre for Biotechnology Sequence Read Archive (NCBI SRA) public database according to the public data usage specifications. Trimmomatic (Department for Metabolic Networks, Potsdam, Germany) and Bowtie 2 (University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA) were used to quality control and dehost the host sequences. Species annotation was made using Kraken2 (Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA) and Bracken (Johns Hopkins University) based on the reference database. According to the results of the species annotation, the species-significant differences and species correlation of caries and healthy oral microbiota in species composition and microbiota diversity were analysed to study the distribution and abundance differences of CPR in the oral environment.
Proteobacteria, Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes, Actinobacteria and Fusobacteria were the main components. The relative abundance of TM7 (Candidatus Saccharibacteria) and GN02 (Candidatus Gracilibacteria) of CPR is second only to the aforementioned five bacteria, indicating that CPR is an important part of the oral microbiota. TM7 and GN02 were common to both the caries patients and healthy patients and were detected in all samples, suggesting that CPR is the 'core microbiome'. There was a correlation between CPR and a variety of oral microbiota, among which the positive correlation with Capnocytophaga was the strongest, suggesting that Capnocytophaga might be the potential host bacteria of CPR.
CPR is an indispensable part of the oral microbiota. It is the 'core microflora' of the oral cavity and may play an important role in the stability and function of the oral microecological environment. Capnocytophaga may be the potential host bacteria of CPR.
研究龋病患者和健康人群口腔中候选门辐射菌(CPR)的组成及丰度。
根据公共数据使用规范,从美国国立生物技术信息中心序列读取存档库(NCBI SRA)公共数据库下载了总共88名受试者的原始宏基因组测序数据。使用Trimmomatic(德国波茨坦代谢网络部)和Bowtie 2(美国马里兰大学帕克分校)进行质量控制并去除宿主序列。基于参考数据库,使用Kraken2(美国马里兰州巴尔的摩市约翰·霍普金斯大学)和Bracken(约翰·霍普金斯大学)进行物种注释。根据物种注释结果,分析龋病和健康口腔微生物群在物种组成和微生物群多样性方面的物种显著差异及物种相关性,以研究CPR在口腔环境中的分布和丰度差异。
变形菌门、厚壁菌门、拟杆菌门、放线菌门和梭杆菌门是主要组成部分。CPR中TM7(暂定糖菌属)和GN02(暂定纤细菌属)的相对丰度仅次于上述五种细菌,表明CPR是口腔微生物群的重要组成部分。TM7和GN02在龋病患者和健康患者中均常见,且在所有样本中均被检测到,提示CPR是“核心微生物组”。CPR与多种口腔微生物群之间存在相关性,其中与二氧化碳嗜纤维菌的正相关性最强,提示二氧化碳嗜纤维菌可能是CPR的潜在宿主菌。
CPR是口腔微生物群不可或缺的一部分。它是口腔的“核心微生物区系”,可能在口腔微生态环境的稳定性和功能中发挥重要作用。二氧化碳嗜纤维菌可能是CPR的潜在宿主菌。