| Literature DB >> 31649943 |
Marjory Xavier Rodrigues1, Ana Nemec2, Nadine Fiani3, Rodrigo C Bicalho1, Santiago Peralta3.
Abstract
Dental fractures resulting in pulp exposure will lead to an endodontic infection with microbes from the oral cavity. However, data on the endodontic microbial composition in veterinary dentistry is lacking. The aim of this study was to examine the microbiome of naturally occurring primary endodontic infections in client-owned dogs. The endodontic microbiome of 10 non-vital teeth with exposed pulp cavities was assessed using a 16S rRNA gene sequencing approach. The results were compared to the microbiome of the subgingival plaque of the same teeth. Analysis revealed an abundant mixed microflora of a comparable richness and diversity and with mostly the same phyla obtained from sulcal and endodontic samples. However, further analysis revealed significant differences between sulcal and endodontic samples in the relative abundance of the most abundant phyla and genera, with the relative abundance of Bacteriodetes being significantly higher in endodontic samples. Although each sample presented a particular profile regarding the genera identified, Bacteroides was the most abundant genus in the endodontic samples. Snowella was also significantly more abundant in endodontic samples, while Porphyromonas and Fusobacterium were significantly more abundant in sulcal samples. We confirmed that the microbiome of the diseased endodontic system is comparably abundant with microorganisms to the healthy subgingival plaque indicating that previous culture-based studies of primary endodontic infections in dogs underestimated the richness and diversity of the endodontic microbiota.Entities:
Keywords: dogs; fractured teeth; microbiome; non-vital teeth; primary endodontic infection
Year: 2019 PMID: 31649943 PMCID: PMC6794715 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2019.00348
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Figure 1Relative abundance of phyla found in sulcal samples and endodontic samples from different dogs. (A) Relative abundance of the ten most abundant genera according to sulcal samples (S_) and endodontic samples (E_) from different dogs (D1 to D10); (B) Comparison between groups of samples using the most abundant phyla. Error bars represent standard error of the mean. The asterisks indicate significant difference between sulcal samples and endodontic samples (*Adjusted P-value 0.0125; ****Adjusted P-value < 0.0001).
Figure 2Relative abundance of genera found in sulcal samples and endodontic samples from different dogs. (A) Relative abundance of the thirty most abundant genera according to sulcal samples (S_) and endodontic samples (E_) from different dogs (D1 to D10); (B) Relative abundance of genera found as significant according to response screening analysis (P-value < 0.1; FDR P-value < 0.1; robust fit). Response screening analysis was performed using the fifty most abundant genera to identify significant taxa. Error bars represent standard error of the mean. The asterisks indicate significant difference between sulcal samples and endodontic samples (*Adjusted P-value 0.0119; **Adjusted P-value 0.0011; ***Adjusted P-value 0.0005; Adjusted P-value < 0.0001).
Figure 3Principal component analysis of genera identified as significant by response screening analysis (P-value < 0.1; FDR P-value < 0.1; robust fit). (A) Graph showing similarity between samples represented by each point, which is colored regarding the site sampled (green = sulcal samples; red = endodontic samples); (B) Graph presenting genera correlated with endodontic samples (left side) and sulcal samples (right side). The variance explained by each component is shown in parentheses.
Figure 4Bar graphs (A) illustrating Chao1 and Shannon indices found in sulcal samples and endodontic samples from dogs (significant difference not found, P-value ≤ 0.05). Venn diagram (B) illustrating the number of bacterial/archaeal genera shared (dark red overlap) and unique (blue circle = sulcal samples; red circle = endodontic samples) across all samples analyzed.