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Early microbial markers of periodontal and cardiometabolic diseases in ORIGINS

Clarisse Marotz, Rebecca Molinsky, Cameron Martino, Bruno Bohn, Sumith Roy, Michael Rosenbaum, Moı̈se Desvarieux, M. Yuzefpolskaya, Bruce J. Paster, David R. Jacobs, P.C. Colombo, Panos N. Papapanou, Rob Knight, Ryan T. Demmer

2022npj Biofilms and Microbiomes29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Periodontitis affects up to 50% of individuals worldwide, and 8.5% are diagnosed with diabetes. The high-comorbidity rate of these diseases may suggest, at least in part, a shared etiology and pathophysiology. Changes in oral microbial communities have been documented in the context of severe periodontitis and diabetes, both independently and together. However, much less is known about the early oral microbial markers of these diseases. We used a subset of the ORIGINS project dataset, which collected detailed periodontal and cardiometabolic information from 787 healthy individuals, to identify early microbial markers of periodontitis and its association with markers of cardiometabolic health. Using state-of-the-art compositional data analysis tools, we identified the log-ratio of Treponema to Corynebacterium bacteria to be a novel Microbial Indicator of Periodontitis (MIP), and found that this MIP correlates with poor periodontal health and cardiometabolic markers early in disease pathogenesis in both subgingival plaque and saliva.

Topics & Concepts

PeriodontitisContext (archaeology)Diabetes mellitusSalivaEtiologyMedicineComorbidityChronic periodontitisBiologyInternal medicineEndocrinologyPaleontologyOral microbiology and periodontitis researchDental Health and Care UtilizationGut microbiota and health
Early microbial markers of periodontal and cardiometabolic diseases in ORIGINS | Litcius