Author:
Gilmour M N,Turner G,Krenzer A K,Zahn L B,Curzon J A
Abstract
The ratio of protein to wet weight in unpooled samples of supragingival plaques from sound and carious tooth surfaces was studied. Protein was assayed by a procedure developed for the study, in order to achieve a sensitivity of 1 microgram with minimum effects upon quantitation from protein composition and nonprotein components. Ratios of protein to wet weight in plaque specimens from caries-free surfaces were almost equally distributed into two main categories of 9.4% and 6.5%. Corresponding values for specimens from carious surfaces were 9.1% and 5.0%. The occurrence of high and of low values among samples from each type of surface indicated that the plaques differed quantitatively in protein, water, or a nonprotein component, possibly extracellular polysaccharide. Although compositional differences between plaques from the two types of surfaces were indicated by the lower ratios of 6.5% from noncarious and 5.0% from carious surfaces, they were not indicated by the higher ratio values, which were similar. These results suggest either that protein-to-wet weight ratios are not related to caries, or that the ratio values are related to caries for some but not all types of plaques.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
3 articles.
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