AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the impact of maltitol-sweetened gum on the oral microbiota of healthy volunteers, highlighting its potential benefits on oral health through increased salivary flow and decreased levels of harmful bacteria.
  • A total of 153 participants were randomly assigned to different groups: one chewed maltitol gum, another used gum-base, and the third group had no gum, with plaque samples collected and analyzed at specified intervals for bacterial composition.
  • Results indicated that maltitol gum significantly reduced the abundance of certain bacterial species compared to the gum-base group, with further analysis revealing gene expression changes related to bacterial growth and metabolic processes.

Article Abstract

The oral cavity harbors a complex microbial ecosystem, intimately related to oral health and disease. The use of polyol-sweetened gum is believed to benefit oral health through stimulation of salivary flow and impacting oral pathogenic bacteria. Maltitol is often used as sweetener in food products. This study aimed to establish the effects of frequent consumption of maltitol-sweetened chewing gum on the dental plaque microbiota in healthy volunteers and to establish the cellular and molecular effects by cultivation and transcriptional analysis. An intervention study was performed in 153 volunteers, randomly assigned to three groups (www.trialregister.nl; NTR4165). One group was requested to use maltitol gum five times daily, one group used gum-base, and the third group did not use chewing gum. At day 0 and day 28, 24 h-accumulated supragingival plaque was collected at the lingual sites of the lower jaw and the buccal sites of the upper jaw and analyzed by 16S ribosomal rRNA gene sequencing. At day 42, 2 weeks after completion of the study, lower-jaw samples were collected and analyzed. The upper buccal plaque microbiota composition had lower bacterial levels and higher relative abundances of (facultative) aerobic species compared to the lower lingual sites. There was no difference in bacterial community structure between any of the three study groups (PERMANOVA). Significant lower abundance of several bacterial phylotypes was found in maltitol gum group compared to the gum-base group, including HOT 852 and HOT 022. Cultivation studies confirmed growth inhibition of and by maltitol at levels of 1% and higher. Transcriptome analysis of revealed that exposure to maltitol resulted in changes in the expression of genes linked to osmoregulation, biofilm formation, and central carbon metabolism. The results showed that chewing itself only marginally impacted the plaque microbiota composition. Use of maltitol-sweetened gum lowered abundance of several bacterial species. Importantly, the species impacted play a key role in the early formation of dental biofilms. Further studies are required to establish if frequent use of maltitol gum impacts early dental-plaque biofilm development.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5845675PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2018.00381DOI Listing

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