Litcius/Paper detail

Oral microbiota in aging and diseases

Ya Ren, Mingxu Chen, Ziyang Wang, Jing‐Dong J. Han

2024Life Medicine25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Human microbiomes are microbial populations that form a symbiotic relationship with humans. There are up to 1000 species on the surface of human skin and mucosal system, among which gut microbiota attracts the most interest. As the beginning of the digestive tract, oral cavity is also an important microbial habitat in the human body which is the first line of defense against pathogens entering the body. Many studies have revealed that oral microbial dysbiosis could not only contribute to oral diseases but also whole-body systemic diseases and health status. Oral microorganisms can enter the gastrointestinal tract with saliva and food, or enter the blood circulation through mouth breakage, thus causing systemic inflammation and aging-related diseases including some causal links to Alzheimer's disease. A series of changes take place in oral microbial composition during development, with different age stages marked by different dominant microbial species. Despite a lack of comprehensive studies on aging oral microbiota, through systemic inflammation, oral pathogenic microbes are likely to contribute inflammatory aging. As inflammaging is a key signature and one of the causes for accelerated aging, improving the structure of oral microbiome may be not only a new strategy for disease prevention and treatment, but also for aging intervention.

Topics & Concepts

Oral MicrobiomeDysbiosisMicrobiomeDiseaseBiologySalivaInflammationImmunologyHuman microbiomeGastrointestinal tractOral cavitySystemic inflammationGut floraMedicineBioinformaticsPathologyBiochemistryOrthodonticsOral microbiology and periodontitis researchSalivary Gland Disorders and FunctionsGut microbiota and health