6533b838fe1ef96bd12a531c

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Ancient dental calculus preserves signatures of biofilm succession and interindividual variation independent of dental pathology

Irina M. VelskoLena SemerauSarah A. InskipMaite Iris García-colladoKirsten A. ZiesemerMaria Serrano RuberLuis Benítez De Lugo EnrichJesús Manuel Molero GarcíaDavid Gallego ValleAna Cristina Peña RuizDomingo C. Salazar GarcíaMenno L.p. HooglandChristina Warinner

subject

Restes humanes (Arqueologia)Antropología biológicaMicrobiologíaGenéticaArqueología

description

AbstractDental calculus preserves oral microbes, enabling comparative studies of the oral microbiome and health through time. However, small sample sizes and limited dental health metadata have hindered health-focused investigations to date. Here we investigate the relationship between tobacco pipe smoking and dental calculus microbiomes. Dental calculus from 75 individuals from the 19th century Middenbeemster skeletal collection (Netherlands) were analyzed by metagenomics. Demographic and dental health parameters were systematically recorded, including the presence/number of pipe notches. Comparative data sets from European populations before and after the introduction of tobacco were also analyzed. Calculus species profiles were compared with oral pathology to examine associations between microbiome community, smoking behavior, and oral health status. The Middenbeemster individuals exhibited relatively poor oral health, with a high prevalence of periodontal disease, caries, heavy calculus deposits, and antemortem tooth loss. No associations between pipe notches and dental pathologies, or microbial species composition, were found. Calculus samples before and after the introduction of tobacco showed highly similar species profiles. Observed inter-individual microbiome differences were consistent with previously described variation in human populations from the Upper Paleolithic to the present. Dental calculus may not preserve microbial indicators of health and disease status as distinctly as dental plaque.Research HighlightsNo associations between calculus species profiles and oral health metrics were detected in a single large populationA minority of individuals have a dental calculus species profile characterized by low levels of Streptococcus and high levels of anaerobic taxa

10.1093/pnasnexus/pgac148