Affiliation:
1. Oral Infection and Immunity Branch, National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Human dental biofilm communities comprise several species, which can interact cooperatively or competitively. Bacterial interactions influence biofilm formation, metabolic changes, and physiological function of the community. Lactic acid, a common metabolite of oral bacteria, was measured in the flow cell effluent of one-, two- and three-species communities growing on saliva as the sole nutritional source. We investigated single-species and multispecies colonization by using known initial, early, middle, and late colonizers of enamel. Fluorescent-antibody staining and image analysis were used to quantify the biomass in saliva-fed flow cells. Of six species tested, only the initial colonizer
Actinomyces oris
exhibited significant growth. The initial colonizer
Streptococcus oralis
produced lactic acid but showed no significant growth. The early colonizer
Veillonella
sp. utilized lactic acid in two- and three-species biofilm communities. The biovolumes of all two-species biofilms increased when
Veillonella
sp. was present as one of the partners, indicating that this early colonizer promotes mutualistic community development. All three-species combinations exhibited enhanced growth except one, i.e.,
A. oris
,
Veillonella
sp., and the middle colonizer
Porphyromonas gingivalis
, indicating specificity among three-species communities. Further specificity was seen when
Fusobacterium nucleatum
(a middle colonizer),
Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans
(a late colonizer), and
P. gingivalis
did not grow with
S. oralis
in two-species biofilms, but inclusion of
Veillonella
sp. resulted in growth of all three-species combinations. We propose that commensal veillonellae use lactic acid for growth in saliva and that they communicate metabolically with initial, early, middle, and late colonizers to establish multispecies communities on enamel.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
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