4.3 Article

Myrsinoic acid B inhibits the production of hydrogen sulfide by periodontal pathogens in vitro

Journal

JOURNAL OF BREATH RESEARCH
Volume 4, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1752-7155/4/2/026005

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Recently, we reported that myrsinoic acid B purified from Myrsine seguinii inhibited methyl mercaptan (CH(3)SH) production by Fusobacterium nucleatum JCM8532. Since hydrogen sulfide (H(2)S) is the main component of physiological halitosis, while CH(3)SH is involved in pathological oral halitosis, the objective of this study is to determine whether myrsinoic acid B inhibits H(2)S production by oral microorganisms. F. nucleatum, Porphyromonas gingivalis and Treponema denticola were incubated with myrsinoic acid B and a substrate such as L-cysteine or L-methionine. H(2)S or CH(3)SH concentration in the headspace air, was determined using a gas chromatograph. The concentration of myrsinoic acid B inhibiting 50% (IC(50)) of H(2)S production by F. nucleatum was 0.142 mu g ml(-1), and the IC(50) of P. gingivalis and T. denticola kwere 2.71 mu g ml(-1) and 28.9 mu g ml-1, respectively. The presence of pyruvate, a by-product of H2S production, was determined. The IC(50) values of myrsinoic acid B for pyruvate production were 22.9 mu g ml(-1) for F. nucleatum, 87.7 mu g ml(-1) for P. gingivalis and 165 mu g ml(-1) for T. denticola. We concluded that myrsinoic acid B inhibited the production of both H(2)S and pyruvate by periodontal pathogens.

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