6533b829fe1ef96bd128a2dd

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Stimulated and unstimulated saliva samples have significantly different bacterial profiles

José Manuel Almerich-sillaJosé María Montiel-companySonia Gomar-vercherAurea Simon-soroAlex Mira

subject

Bacterial DiseasesMale0301 basic medicineSalivaPhysiologylcsh:MedicineMicrobiologiaPathology and Laboratory MedicineOral cavityDatabase and Informatics Methodsfluids and secretions0302 clinical medicineOral DiseasesCariesMedicine and Health SciencesFood sciencelcsh:ScienceChildMultidisciplinaryGenomicsBody FluidsBacterial PathogensInfectious Diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structureMedical MicrobiologyParaffinFemaleAnatomyPathogensSequence AnalysisResearch ArticleAdolescentBioinformaticsOral MedicineSequence DatabasesMicrobial GenomicsBiologyResearch and Analysis MethodsDental plaqueMicrobiologyBuccal mucosa03 medical and health sciencesOral Microbiotastomatognathic systemTongueGeneticsmedicineHumansEpidemiologiaSalivaMicrobial PathogensBacteriaBocalcsh:ROrganismsBiology and Life SciencesStreptococcus030206 dentistrymedicine.disease16S ribosomal RNAstomatognathic diseasesBiological Databases030104 developmental biologyEstomatologiaPyrosequencinglcsh:QMicrobiome

description

Epidemiological studies use saliva on a regular basis as a non-invasive and easy-to-take sample, which is assumed to be a microbial representative of the oral cavity ecosystem. However, comparative studies between different kinds of saliva samples normally used in microbial studies are scarce. The aim of the current study was to compare oral microbiota composition between two different saliva samples collected simultaneously: non-stimulated saliva with paper points and stimulated saliva collected after chewing paraffin gum. DNA was extracted from saliva samples of ten individuals, then analyzed by 16S rRNA pyrosequencing to describe bacterial diversity. The results demonstrate significant differences between the microbiota of these two kinds of saliva. Stimulated saliva was found to contain an estimated number of species over three times higher than unstimulated saliva. In addition, bacterial composition at the class and genus level was radically different between both types of samples. When compared to other oral niches, both types of saliva showed some similarity to tongue and buccal mucosa, but they do not correlate at all with the bacterial composition described in supra- or sub-gingival dental plaque, questioning their use in etiological and epidemiological studies of oral diseases of microbial origin.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0198021