Affiliation:
1. Dental Research Institute and Department of Oral Biology, University of Michigan School of Dentistry, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104
Abstract
Certain dental plaques, removed from sites of gingival and periodontal pathology in mentally retarded, institutionalized individuals, when incubated in phosphate buffer with Achilles tendon collagen, gave rise to an increase in ninhydrin-positive material. These plaques, while showing great variability, released significantly more ninhydrin-positive material per milligram of plaque (wet weight) than did either the endogenous or heat-treated controls. Certain plaques could also break down soluble, tritiated, labeled collagen isolated from the calvaria of chicken embryos.
Bacteroides melaninogenicus
and
Clostridia histolyticum
were found in plaques by either fluorescent antibody or cultural methods.
C. histolyticum
, when detected, accounted for about 0.01 to 0.1% of the bacteria in plaque. A conspicuous isolate from some plaques was a
Bacillus
species which rapidly liquefied gelatin. Cell-free supernatants of this organism were able to degrade about 50 to 70% of the soluble collagen when incubated at 36 C.
C. histolyticum
ATCC 8034 caused an 80% degradation of the collagen under the same conditions of incubation. The
Bacillus
strains were facultative, could ferment glucose, reduced nitrate to nitrite, and were catalase, indole, and urease negative. The limited taxonomic information for the isolates is compatible with the description given for
Bacillus cereus.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
30 articles.
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