Affiliation:
1. School of Dentistry, University of Alabama, Birmingham, Alabama
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The heterogeneous group of oral bacteria within the sanguinis (sanguis) streptococci comprise members of the indigenous biota of the human oral cavity. While the association of
Streptococcus sanguinis
with bacterial endocarditis is well described in the literature,
S. sanguinis
is thought to play a benign, if not a beneficial, role in the oral cavity. Little is known, however, about the natural history of
S. sanguinis
and its specific relationship with other oral bacteria. As part of a longitudinal study concerning the transmission and acquisition of oral bacteria within mother-infant pairs, we examined the initial acquisition of
S. sanguinis
and described its colonization relative to tooth emergence and its proportions in plaque and saliva as a function of other biological events, including subsequent colonization with mutans streptococci. A second cohort of infants was recruited to define the taxonomic affiliation of
S. sanguinis
. We found that the colonization of the
S. sanguinis
occurs during a discrete “window of infectivity” at a median age of 9 months in the infants. Its colonization is tooth dependent and correlated to the time of tooth emergence; its proportions in saliva increase as new teeth emerge. In addition, early colonization of
S. sanguinis
and its elevated levels in the oral cavity were correlated to a significant delay in the colonization of mutans streptococci. Underpinning this apparent antagonism between
S. sanguinis
and mutans streptococci is the observation that after mutans streptococci colonize the infant, the levels of
S. sanguinis
decrease. Children who do not harbor detectable levels of mutans streptococci have significantly higher levels of
S. sanguinis
in their saliva than do children colonized with mutans streptococci. Collectively, these findings suggest that the colonization of
S. sanguinis
may influence the subsequent colonization of mutans streptococci, and this in turn may suggest several ecological approaches toward controlling dental caries.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Reference38 articles.
1. A scheme for the identification of viridans streptococci;Beighton D.;J. Med. Microbiol.,1991
2. Intrageneric structure of Streptococcus based on comparative analysis of small-subunit rRNA sequences;Bentley R. W.;Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol.,1991
3. Stability of Streptococcus mutans and its relationship to caries in a child population over 2 years;Burt B. A.;Caries Res.,1983
4. A numerical taxonomic study of human oral streptococci;Carlsson J.;Odontol. Revy.,1968
5. Zooglea-forming streptococci, resembling Streptococcus sanguis, isolated from dental plaque in man;Carlsson J.;Odontol. Revy,1965
Cited by
186 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献