| Literature DB >> 29907776 |
Ghiles Grine1, Elodie Terrer1,2,3, Mahmoud Abdelwadoud Boualam1, Gérard Aboudharam1,2,3, Hervé Chaudet1, Raymond Ruimy4, Michel Drancourt5.
Abstract
The oral fluid microbiome comprises an important bacterial diversity, yet the presence of archaea has not been reported so far. In order to quest for the presence of methanogenic archaea (methanogens) in oral fluid, we used a polyphasic approach including PCR-sequencing detection, microscopic observation by fluorescence in-situ hybridization, isolation and culture, molecular identification and genotyping of methanogens in 200 oral fluid specimens. In the presence of negative controls, 64/200 (32%) prospectively analysed oral fluid specimens were PCR-positive for methanogens, all identified as Methanobrevibacter oralis by sequencing. Further, fluorescence in-situ hybridization detected methanogens in 19/48 (39.6%) investigated specimens; with morphology suggesting M. oralis in 10 cases and co-infecting Methanobrevibacter smithii in nine cases. M. oralis was cultured from 46/64 (71.8%) PCR-positive specimens and none of PCR-negative specimens; and one M. smithii isolate was co-cultured with M. oralis in one specimen. Multispacer Sequence Typing found one M. oralis genotype per specimen and a total of five different genotypes with 19/46 (41%) of isolates all belonging to spacer-type four. Statistical analyses showed a significant correlation between the PCR-detection of methanogens in oral fluid and tobacco smoking. These data indicate that M. oralis and M. smithii are oral fluid-borne methanogens in tobacco smokers. Both methanogens could be transmitted during intimate contacts such as mother-to-child contacts and kissing.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29907776 PMCID: PMC6003954 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-27372-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Fluorescence in situ Hybridization (FISH) representative detection of M. oralis in oral fluid sample. (A) Universal DNA DAPI staining exhibiting blue microorganisms. (B) ARC 915 probe staining the archaeal 16S rRNA gene in red (C) mcrA probe staining the methanogen mcrA gene in green (D) overlay of ARC 915and mcrA probes exhibiting pink organisms with the diplococcus morphology characteristic of M. smithii in the yellow square and the morphology of M.oralis in the green square. Scale bar, 10 μm.
Figure 2M. oralis (pale colonies forming a film) and M. smithii (white colonies) isolates from an oral fluid specimen collected in a tabacco-smoking individual.
Figure 3Molecular detection of methanogen DNA in oral fluid (A) in males and females and (B) in tobacco smokers and non-smokers.
Results of the binomial logistic regression.
| Estimate | Standard Error | z value | Statistical significance | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intercept | −0.75296 | 1.36493 | −0.552 | NS |
| Smoker status | 4.41741 | 0.57504 | 7.682 | *** |
| Age | −0.06295 | 0.04871 | −1.292 | NS |
| Sex | 0.71094 | 0.48670 | 1.461 | NS |
Null deviance: 250.75 on 199 degrees of freedom.
Residual deviance: 134.35 on 196 degrees of freedom.
AIC: 142.35NS: No statistically significant; ***p-value < 0.001.