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Aggregation of 27 oral bacteria by human whole saliva

โœ Scribed by H. M. Koop; M. Valentijn-Benz; A. V. Nieuw Amerongen; P. A. Roukema; J. Graaff


Book ID
104753890
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Year
1989
Tongue
English
Weight
660 KB
Volume
55
Category
Article
ISSN
0003-6072

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โœฆ Synopsis


Twenty-seven oral strains of the genera Actinomyces (5), Bacteroides (3), and Streptococcus (19) were tested for aggregation by human whole saliva, as well as the effect of culture medium, Ca-ions, and bacteria concentration thereupon. Of the media tested, GF-broth gave rise to less interference by autoaggregation or higher aggregation titers than BHI and TSB, and was used throughout this study. In most cases, Ca-ions (1 mM) only enhanced the rate of induced aggregation, whereas raising the bacteria concentration increased the rate of both induced-and autoaggregation. The final titers, ranging from 1-64, were hardly affected by these parameters, except those of S. rattus HG 59 and S. mutans HG 199, which were respectively increased and decreased by Ca-ions. Saliva-induced aggregation was observed for 21 strains of A. viscosus, A. naeslundii, A. israelii, B. gingivalis, B. intermedius, S. cricetus, S. mutans, S. rattus, S. sanguis, and S. sobrinus, mostly within 15 rain to 3 h. Seventeen of these strains also showed autoaggregation, usually well after the onset of induced aggregation. Any potential induced aggregation of B. gingivalis HG 91 was always masked by autoaggregation, as well as that of the S. mutans strains under a particular set of conditions. The aggregation rate and titer varied considerably in a mutually unrelated and strain-dependent way. These microtiterplate data were matched by the 5 spectrophotometric patterns observed for saliva-bacterial interaction, which moreover, gave the better differentiation between induced and autoaggregation. In conclusion, most strains tested can show rapid saliva-induced aggregation in a strain-dependent way, yet strongly affected by the experimental conditions and interference from autoaggregation.


๐Ÿ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Aggregation of oral bacteria by human sa
โœ H. M. Koop; M. Valentijn-Benz; A. V. Nieuw Amerongen; P. A. Roukema; J. Graaff ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 1990 ๐Ÿ› Springer Netherlands ๐ŸŒ English โš– 666 KB

Seventeen strains of oral bacteria of the genera Actinomyces (5), Bacteroides (3), and Streptococcus (9) were tested for aggregation by the human whole salivary mucin fraction (HWSM) in comparison to three types of animal mucin preparations from submandibular glands of cow (BSM) and sheep (OSM), and