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Maturation of the Oral Microbiome in Caries-Free Toddlers

Authors :
Barry P. Katz
Richard Jackson
Margherita Fontana
D Kahharova
Mathilde C. Peters
George J. Eckert
S. M. Levy
Martha Ann Keels
Mark J. Buijs
B.W. Brandt
E. Zaura
Preventive Dentistry
Source :
Journal of Dental Research, Journal of Dental Research, 99(2), 159-167. SAGE Publications Inc., Kahharova, D, Brandt, B W, Buijs, M J, Peters, M, Jackson, R, Eckert, G, Katz, B, Keels, M A, Levy, S M, Fontana, M & Zaura, E 2020, ' Maturation of the Oral Microbiome in Caries-Free Toddlers : A Longitudinal Study ', Journal of Dental Research, vol. 99, no. 2, pp. 159-167 . https://doi.org/10.1177/0022034519889015
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
SAGE Publications Inc., 2020.

Abstract

Understanding the development of the oral microbiota in healthy children is of great importance to oral and general health. However, limited data exist on a healthy maturation of the oral microbial ecosystem in children. Moreover, the data are biased by mislabeling “caries-free” populations. Therefore, we aimed to characterize the healthy salivary and dental plaque microbiome in young children. Caries-free (ICDAS [International Caries Detection and Assessment System] score 0) children ( n = 119) and their primary caregivers were followed from 1 until 4 y of child age. Salivary and dental plaque samples were collected from the children at 3 time points (T1, ~1 y old; T2, ~2.5 y old; and T3, ~4 y old). Only saliva samples were collected from the caregivers. Bacterial V4 16S ribosomal DNA amplicons were sequenced using Illumina MiSeq. The reads were denoised and mapped to the zero-radius operational taxonomic units (zOTUs). Taxonomy was assigned using HOMD. The microbial profiles of children showed significant differences ( P = 0.0001) over time. Various taxa increased, including Fusobacterium, Actinomyces, and Corynebacterium, while others showed significant decreases (e.g., Alloprevotella and Capnocytophaga) in their relative abundances over time. Microbial diversity and child-caregiver similarity increased most between 1 and 2.5 y of age while still not reaching the complexity of the caregivers at 4 y of age. The microbiome at 1 y of age differed the most from those at later time points. A single zOTU ( Streptococcus) was present in all samples ( n = 925) of the study. A large variation in the proportion of shared zOTUs was observed within an individual child over time (2% to 42% of zOTUs in saliva; 2.5% to 38% in dental plaque). These findings indicate that the oral ecosystem of caries-free toddlers is highly heterogeneous and dynamic with substantial changes in microbial composition over time and only few taxa persisting across the 3 y of the study. The salivary microbiome of 4-y-old children is still distinct from that of their caregivers.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15440591 and 00220345
Volume :
99
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Dental Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....825c49fabeeacc994a98552877262e40
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0022034519889015