Liljemark W F, Bloomquist C G, Ofstehage J C
Infect Immun. 1979 Dec;26(3):1104-10. doi: 10.1128/iai.26.3.1104-1110.1979.
Fourteen freshly isolated strains of Streptococcus sanguis were obtained from the dental plaque of five healthy adults. Whole saliva was collected concomitant with the plaque isolates from the five subjects, and a second whole saliva sample was collected 10 weeks later. All possible combinations of the first five saliva samples, the second five saliva samples, and 14 strains of bacteria were tested for aggregation. Of the 140 combinations examined, 108 of 140 (77%) of the strains aggregated with the first saliva samples and 95 of 140 (68%) aggregated with the second saliva samples. Overall, 72% of the strains aggregated with both the first and second saliva samples. Removal of immunoglobulin A (IgA) from these same salivas resulted in 38 of 108 (35%) of the aggregates decreasing in intensity with the first saliva samples and 27 of 95 (29%) of the aggregates decreasing in intensity with the second saliva samples. No aggregates increased in intensity with saliva samples when IgA had been removed. Removal of IgA from saliva also resulted in a mean decrease of 46% in adherence of S. sanguis to hydroxyapatite coated with the IgA-deficient saliva. Several strains of S. sanguis were shown to aggregate strongly with human salivary and colostral IgA. In addition, S. sanguis strain S7 showed a 31% stimulation of adherence to hydroxyapatite precoated with human salivary IgA over the uncoated controls. Stepwise removal of IgA from saliva resulted in a decrease in aggregation intensity from strong (4+) to weak (1+ to 2+). Similarly, the adherence of S. sanguis to hydroxyapatite coated with these saliva samples decreased linearly as the salivary IgA was depleted. Alternatively, the addition of a small quantity of salivary IgA (20 mug/ml) to progressively diluted saliva maintained a high level of adherence and strong aggregation until the saliva dilutions reached between 1:8 in the adherence experiments and 1:32 for the aggregations. These data indicate that salivary IgA may play an important role in the microbial ecology of human dental plaque formation.
从5名健康成年人的牙菌斑中获取了14株新分离的血链球菌菌株。在采集牙菌斑分离株的同时收集了这5名受试者的全唾液,并在10周后采集了第二份全唾液样本。对前五份唾液样本、后五份唾液样本以及14株细菌的所有可能组合进行了聚集试验。在所检测的140种组合中,140种中有108种(77%)的菌株与第一份唾液样本发生聚集,140种中有95种(68%)与第二份唾液样本发生聚集。总体而言,72%的菌株与第一份和第二份唾液样本均发生聚集。从这些唾液中去除免疫球蛋白A(IgA)后,108种聚集中有38种(35%)与第一份唾液样本的聚集强度降低,95种聚集中有27种(29%)与第二份唾液样本的聚集强度降低。去除IgA后,没有聚集物与唾液样本的聚集强度增加。从唾液中去除IgA还导致血链球菌对涂有缺乏IgA唾液的羟基磷灰石的黏附力平均降低46%。几株血链球菌被证明能与人唾液和初乳中的IgA强烈聚集。此外,血链球菌菌株S7在涂有人类唾液IgA的羟基磷灰石上的黏附力比未包被的对照增加了31%。逐步从唾液中去除IgA导致聚集强度从强(4+)降至弱(1+至2+)。同样,随着唾液中IgA的消耗,血链球菌对涂有这些唾液样本的羟基磷灰石的黏附力呈线性下降。或者,在逐渐稀释的唾液中添加少量唾液IgA(20微克/毫升),在黏附实验中,直到唾液稀释至1:8,在聚集实验中直到唾液稀释至1:32之前,都能维持高水平的黏附力和强烈的聚集。这些数据表明,唾液IgA可能在人类牙菌斑形成的微生物生态中起重要作用。