AI Article Synopsis

  • The oral microbiome's composition is affected by environmental factors in chronic kidney disease (CKD) and after kidney transplantation, particularly influenced by urea levels in saliva.
  • The study modeled the effects of varying urea concentrations in saliva across different phases: healthy, CKD, and post-transplant, using artificial saliva and observing microbial changes over time.
  • Findings revealed stability in microbial communities despite urea fluctuations, with notable increases in certain bacteria (like TG5) in late stages, highlighting the complex relationship between salivary urea and oral health in kidney conditions.

Article Abstract

Unlabelled: The oral microbiome is influenced by environmental factors in chronic kidney disease and following kidney transplantation affecting microbial composition, which may have implications for health and recovery. A major driver of oral microbiome perturbation is the accumulation of urea in saliva. We have modelled increased salivary urea concentrations associated with CKD and subsequent reductions that may occur post-transplantation. Oral microbiota were established in constant-depth film fermenters by inoculation with saliva. Duplicate validation runs were maintained with artificial saliva with baseline urea concentrations (0.205 mg/mL) for 21 days. Triplicate treatment runs were then done with baseline urea for 10 days (healthy phase) before urea was increased for 10 days to reflect CKD concentrations (0.92 mg/mL) (CKD phase). This was followed by reversion to baseline urea concentrations (post-transplant phase). Biofilms in primary validation runs reached dynamic stability within 5 days according to viable counting. DNA sequence data indicated minimal taxonomic variation over time and between low and high urea treatments despite background noise indicating changes in bacteria belonging to the family Gemellaceae and the genera TG5 and . Significant differences in alpha and beta diversity occurred between low and high urea states but not following reversion to a low urea environment. Increased abundance of the TG5 was detected in late model phases, despite apparent count stability, and independent of changes in urea concentrations.

Importance: This study investigates dynamic changes in the oral microbiome associated with changes in salivary urea concentration, an important factor in chronic kidney disease (CKD). The system modeled increased urea concentrations and subsequent reductions post-transplantation. The study provides insight into the oral microbial shifts during different simulated clinical phases. Understanding these dynamics is crucial for advancing our comprehension of CKD-associated oral microbiome variations and their potential impact on patient well-being and recovery.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11537021PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.00598-24DOI Listing

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