Affiliation:
1. Section of Periodontology
2. Section of Pediatric Dentistry
3. Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, College of Medicine and Public Health, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43218
4. Section of Oral Biology, College of Dentistry
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Most studies of the bacterial etiology of periodontitis have used either culture-based or targeted DNA approaches, and so it is likely that pathogens remain undiscovered. The purpose of this study was to use culture-independent, quantitative analysis of biofilms associated with chronic periodontitis and periodontal health to identify pathogens and beneficial species. Samples from subjects with periodontitis and controls were analyzed using ribosomal 16S cloning and sequencing. Several genera, many of them uncultivated, were associated with periodontitis, the most numerous of which were gram positive, including
Peptostreptococcus
and
Filifactor
. The genera
Megasphaera
and
Desulfobulbus
were elevated in periodontitis, and the levels of several species or phylotypes of
Campylobacter
,
Selenomonas
,
Deferribacteres
,
Dialister
,
Catonella
,
Tannerella
,
Streptococcus
,
Atopobium
,
Eubacterium
, and
Treponema
were elevated in disease.
Streptococcus
and
Veillonella
spp. were found in high numbers in all samples and accounted for a significantly greater fraction of the microbial community in healthy subjects than in those with periodontitis. The microbial profile of periodontal health also included the less-abundant genera
Campylobacter
,
Abiotrophia
,
Gemella
,
Capnocytophaga
, and
Neisseria
. These newly identified candidates outnumbered
Porphyromonas gingivalis
and other species previously implicated as periodontopathogens, and it is not clear if newly identified and more numerous species may play a more important role in pathogenesis. Finally, more differences were found in the bacterial profile between subjects with periodontitis and healthy subjects than between deep and shallow sites within the same subject. This suggests that chronic periodontitis is the result of a global perturbation of the oral bacterial ecology rather than a disease-site specific microbial shift.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
400 articles.
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