4.5 Article

Relationship of children's salivary microbiota with their caries status: a pyrosequencing study

Journal

CLINICAL ORAL INVESTIGATIONS
Volume 18, Issue 9, Pages 2087-2094

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00784-014-1200-y

Keywords

Dental caries; 16S ribosomal RNA; ICDAS II; Saliva; Oral health; Childhood

Funding

  1. Grants for research projects in health and disease prevention and prediction programmes, Valencia Regional Government Health Department, University of Valencia
  2. grants for the Epidemiological Study of Oral Health in the Schoolchild Population of the Valencian Community, University of Valencia [UV-INV-AE11-40221]

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Different dental caries status could be related with alterations in oral microbiota. Previous studies have collected saliva as a representative medium of the oral ecosystem. The purpose of this study was to assess the composition of oral microbiota and its relation to the presence of dental caries at different degrees of severity. One hundred ten saliva samples from 12-year-old children were taken and divided into six groups defined in strict accordance with their dental caries prevalence according to the International Caries Detection and Assessment System II criteria. These samples were studied by pyrosequencing PCR products of the 16S ribosomal RNA gene. The results showed statistically significant intergroup differences at the class and genus taxonomic levels. Streptococcus is the most frequent genus in all groups; although it did not show intergroup statistical differences. In patients with cavities, Porphyromonas and Prevotella showed an increasing percentage compared to healthy individuals. Bacterial diversity diminished as the severity of the disease increased, so those patients with more advanced stages of caries presented less bacterial diversity than healthy subjects. Although microbial composition tended to be different, the intragroup variation is large, as evidenced by the lack of clear intragroup clustering in principal component analyses. Thus, no clear differences were found, indicating that using bacterial composition as the sole source of biomarkers for dental caries may not be reliable in the unstimulated saliva samples used in the current study.

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