| Literature DB >> 30310099 |
E L Sweeney1, S S Al-Shehri2, D M Cowley3, H G Liley3, N Bansal4,5, B G Charles4, P N Shaw4, J A Duley4,3, C L Knox6.
Abstract
Neonates are exposed to microbes in utero and at birth, thereby establishing their microbiota (healthy microbial colonisers). Previously, we reported significant differences in the neonatal oral microbiota of breast-fed and formula-fed babies after first discovering a primal metabolic mechanism that occurs when breastmilk (containing the enzyme xanthine oxidase) and neonatal saliva (containing highly elevated concentrations of the substrates for xanthine oxidase: xanthine and hypoxanthine). The interaction of neonatal saliva and breast milk releases antibacterial compounds including hydrogen peroxide, and regulates the growth of bacteria. Using a novel in vitro experimental approach, the current study compared the effects of this unique metabolic pathway on a range of bacterial species and determined the period of time that microbial growth was affected. We demonstrated that microbial growth was inhibited predominately, immediately and for up to 24 hr following breastmilk and saliva mixing; however, some microorganisms were able to recover and continue to grow following exposure to these micromolar amounts of hydrogen peroxide. Interestingly, growth inhibition was independent of whether the organisms possessed a catalase enzyme. This study further confirms that this is one mechanism that contributes to the significant differences in the neonatal oral microbiota of breast-fed and formula-fed babies.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30310099 PMCID: PMC6181944 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-33519-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Microbial growth in the presence of human breastmilk and simulated neonatal saliva, seeded at 200 and 107 CFU, then incubated at 37 °C for 24 hrs. All species grew in the control (CON) mixture of breastmilk and simulated neonatal saliva (Black line, circles). There was no benefit for most species when purine and pyrimidine bases/nucleosides (PP) were added (purple line, squares). However, when hypoxanthine and xanthine were also added (PP + HX), the growth of most microorganisms was immediately inhibited, due to the generation of oxidative radicals by the breastmilk xanthine oxidase and the lactoperoxidase system (orange line, triangles). Some bacteria were able to recover and continue to grow at rates similar to CON. When xanthine oxidase inhibitor oxypurinol (OXY) was added to the PP + HX mix, microbial growth was completely released from suppression by oxidative radicals (blue line, crosses). *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001.
Figure 2Mixtures of two microorganisms were exposed to human breastmilk and simulated neonatal saliva. The growth of both microorganisms remained similar over a 24 hr time period, irrespective of the ‘pathogenic’ or‘commensal’ nature of the organism within the infant oral cavity. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001.
Figure 3Effect of hydrogen peroxide concentrations on growth of ten bacterial species. Nutrient broth supplemented with varying concentrations of hydrogen peroxide (50 µM – 1 mM, pink-red lines) were seeded with either 200 or 107 CFU. Most of the species exposed to low concentrations of hydrogen peroxide exhibited the ability to recover and grow exponentially, but some species were unable to recover when exposed to higher concentrations (2–5 mM, purple-blue lines) of hydrogen peroxide, over a 24 hr period. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001.