4.7 Article

Stability of healthy subgingival microbiome across space and time

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-03479-2

Keywords

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Funding

  1. James & Esther King Biomedical Research Program of Florida Department of Health [2KN08]
  2. NIH/NIDCR [R56 DE02556]
  3. Gatorade Trust through University of Florida, Department of Medicine

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The subgingival microbiome shows significant differences between individuals and within different subgingival sites within the same individual. Despite the variations in composition, the microbiome at a given site remains remarkably stable over time, with stability associated with increased microbial diversity but inversely correlated with putative periodontal pathogens' enrichment. The predicted functional metagenome, however, shows similarities across space and time, suggesting that periodontal health is linked with shared gene functions encoded by diverse microbiome consortia personalized to individual hosts.
The subgingival microbiome is one of the most stable microbial ecosystems in the human body. Alterations in the subgingival microbiome have been associated with periodontal disease, but their variations over time and between different subgingival sites in periodontally healthy individuals have not been well described. We performed extensive, longitudinal sampling of the subgingival microbiome from five periodontally healthy individuals to define baseline spatial and temporal variations. A total of 251 subgingival samples from 5 subjects were collected over 6-12 months and deep sequenced. The overall microbial diversity and composition differed significantly between individuals. Within each individual, we observed considerable differences in microbiome composition between different subgingival sites. However, for a given site, the microbiome was remarkably stable over time, and this stability was associated with increased microbial diversity but was inversely correlated with the enrichment of putative periodontal pathogens. In contrast to microbiome composition, the predicted functional metagenome was similar across space and time, suggesting that periodontal health is associated with shared gene functions encoded by different microbiome consortia that are individualized. To our knowledge, this is one of the most detailed longitudinal analysis of the healthy subgingival microbiome to date that examined the longitudinal variability of different subgingival sites within individuals. These results suggest that a single measurement of the healthy subgingival microbiome at a given site can provide long term information of the microbial composition and functional potential, but sampling of each site is necessary to define the composition and community structure at individual subgingival sites.

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