AI Article Synopsis

  • The human oral cavity is a rich ecosystem teeming with bacteria and viruses, hosting around 6 billion bacteria and possibly 210 billion viruses.
  • Bacteriophages (viruses that infect bacteria) play a crucial part in regulating the bacteria in the mouth, impacting bacterial evolution, gene functions, and potentially protecting against harmful pathogens.
  • Recent studies indicate that phage communities are linked to oral diseases, particularly periodontal disease, emphasizing the need to understand their role in oral health and their potential to spread antibiotic resistance.

Article Abstract

The human oral cavity provides the perfect portal of entry for viruses and bacteria in the environment to access new hosts. Hence, the oral cavity is one of the most densely populated habitats of the human body containing some 6 billion bacteria and potentially 35 times that many viruses. The role of these viral communities remains unclear; however, many are bacteriophage that may have active roles in shaping the ecology of oral bacterial communities. Other implications for the presence of such vast oral phage communities include accelerating the molecular diversity of their bacterial hosts as both host and phage mutate to gain evolutionary advantages. Additional roles include the acquisitions of new gene functions through lysogenic conversions that may provide selective advantages to host bacteria in response to antibiotics or other types of disturbances, and protection of the human host from invading pathogens by binding to and preventing pathogens from crossing oral mucosal barriers. Recent evidence suggests that phage may be more involved in periodontal diseases than were previously thought, as their compositions in the subgingival crevice in moderate to severe periodontitis are known to be significantly altered. However, it is unclear to what extent they contribute to dysbiosis or the transition of the microbial community into a state promoting oral disease. Bacteriophage communities are distinct in saliva compared to sub- and supragingival areas, suggesting that different oral biogeographic niches have unique phage ecology shaping their bacterial biota. In this review, we summarize what is known about phage communities in the oral cavity, the possible contributions of phage in shaping oral bacterial ecology, and the risks to public health oral phage may pose through their potential to spread antibiotic resistance gene functions to close contacts.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4393417PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3402/jom.v7.27423DOI Listing

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