Biofilm Research Laboratories, Center for Innovation & Precision Dentistry, School of Dental Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United States.
Department of Orthodontics and Divisions of Pediatric Dentistry & Community Oral Health, School of Dental Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United States.
Front Cell Infect Microbiol. 2022 Nov 9;12:993640. doi: 10.3389/fcimb.2022.993640. eCollection 2022.
Bacteria and fungi can interact to form inter-kingdom biofilms in the oral cavity. and are frequently detected in saliva and in dental biofilms associated with early childhood caries (tooth-decay), a prevalent oral disease induced by dietary sugars. However, how different sugars influence this bacterial-fungal interaction remains unclear. Here, we investigate whether specific sugars affect the inter-kingdom interaction in saliva and subsequent biofilm formation on tooth-mimetic surfaces. The microbes were incubated in saliva containing common dietary sugars (glucose and fructose, sucrose, starch, and combinations) and analyzed fluorescence imaging and quantitative computational analyses. The bacterial and fungal cells in saliva were then transferred to hydroxyapatite discs (tooth mimic) to allow microbial binding and biofilm development. We found diverse bacterial-fungal aggregates which varied in size, structure, and spatial organization depending on the type of sugars. Sucrose and starch+sucrose induced the formation of large mixed-species aggregates characterized by bacterial clusters co-bound with fungal cells, whereas mostly single-cells were found in the absence of sugar or in the presence of glucose and fructose. Notably, both colonization and further growth on the apatitic surface were dependent on sugar-mediated aggregation, leading to biofilms with distinctive spatial organizations and 3D architectures. Starch+sucrose and sucrose-mediated aggregates developed into large and highly acidogenic biofilms with complex network of bacterial and fungal cells (yeast and hyphae) surrounded by an intricate matrix of extracellular glucans. In contrast, biofilms originated from glucose and fructose-mediated consortia (or without sugar) were sparsely distributed on the surface without structural integration, growing predominantly as individual species with reduced acidogenicity. These findings reveal the impact of dietary sugars on inter-kingdom interactions in saliva and how they mediate biofilm formation with distinctive structural organization and varying acidogenicity implicated with human tooth-decay.
细菌和真菌可以相互作用,在口腔中形成跨领域生物膜。 和 在唾液中经常被检测到,并且与儿童早期龋齿(蛀牙)有关的牙菌斑中也经常被检测到,这是一种由饮食糖引起的常见口腔疾病。然而,不同的糖如何影响这种细菌-真菌相互作用尚不清楚。在这里,我们研究了特定的糖是否会影响唾液中的种间相互作用以及随后在牙齿模拟表面上形成的生物膜。将微生物在含有常见饮食糖(葡萄糖和果糖、蔗糖、淀粉和组合)的唾液中孵育,并进行荧光成像和定量计算分析。然后将唾液中的细菌和真菌细胞转移到羟基磷灰石盘(牙齿模拟物)上,以允许微生物结合和生物膜的发展。我们发现了不同大小、结构和空间组织的细菌-真菌聚集物,这取决于糖的类型。蔗糖和淀粉+蔗糖诱导形成大的混合物种聚集物,其特征是细菌簇与真菌细胞共同结合,而在没有糖或存在葡萄糖和果糖的情况下则主要发现单细胞。值得注意的是,在磷灰石表面的定植和进一步生长都依赖于糖介导的聚集,导致具有独特空间组织和 3D 结构的生物膜。淀粉+蔗糖和蔗糖介导的聚集物形成大的、产酸能力强的生物膜,具有细菌和真菌细胞(酵母和菌丝)的复杂网络,周围是复杂的胞外葡聚糖基质。相比之下,由葡萄糖和果糖介导的共生体(或无糖)形成的生物膜在表面上稀疏分布,没有结构整合,主要以单个物种生长,产酸能力降低。这些发现揭示了饮食糖对唾液中种间相互作用的影响,以及它们如何通过具有独特结构组织和不同产酸能力的生物膜形成来介导。