| Literature DB >> 31524581 |
Jason L Brown1,2, William Johnston1, Christopher Delaney1, Bryn Short1, Mark C Butcher1, Tracy Young1, John Butcher3,2, Marcello Riggio1, Shauna Culshaw1, Gordon Ramage1.
Abstract
Over the past century, numerous studies have used oral biofilm models to investigate growth kinetics, biofilm formation, structure and composition, antimicrobial susceptibility and host-pathogen interactions. In vivo animal models provide useful models of some oral diseases; however, these are expensive and carry vast ethical implications. Oral biofilms grown or maintained in vitro offer a useful platform for certain studies and have the advantages of being inexpensive to establish and easy to reproduce and manipulate. In addition, a wide range of variables can be monitored and adjusted to mimic the dynamic environmental changes at different sites in the oral cavity, such as pH, temperature, salivary and gingival crevicular fluid flow rates, or microbial composition. This review provides a detailed insight for early-career oral science researchers into how the biofilm models used in oral research have progressed and improved over the years, their advantages and disadvantages, and how such systems have contributed to our current understanding of oral disease pathogenesis and aetiology.Entities:
Keywords: biofilms; dental plaque; host–pathogen interactions; oral biofilm models; oral microbiology
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31524581 DOI: 10.1099/jmm.0.001063
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Microbiol ISSN: 0022-2615 Impact factor: 2.472