APA
Tamayo Estebaranz, Nuria & Muñoz González, Carolina & Gil Valcárcel, Ana María & Calvo López-Dávalo, Paula & Martin Vacas, Andrea & Paz Cortés, Marta Macarena & Aragoneses, Juan Manuel (2025-07 ) .Salivary microbiota profile in adult and children population according to active dentin caries: a metagenomic preliminary analysis.
ISO 690
Tamayo Estebaranz, Nuria & Muñoz González, Carolina & Gil Valcárcel, Ana María & Calvo López-Dávalo, Paula & Martin Vacas, Andrea & Paz Cortés, Marta Macarena & Aragoneses, Juan Manuel. 2025-07 .Salivary microbiota profile in adult and children population according to active dentin caries: a metagenomic preliminary analysis.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/49893
Abstract:
Objectives: The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between
active dentin caries (ADC), salivary biochemical parameters, and salivary
microbiota composition in Spanish children and adults.
Methods: Saliva samples were collected from 80 subjects (40 adults and 40
children) divided between ADC and non-ADC. Salivary biochemical
determination was performed by analysing total protein content (TPC) and total
antioxidant activity (TAC) in saliva supernatants. DNA was obtained from the
pellet of saliva samples using the Bacterial DNA kit and analysed with the
Illumina NextSeq platform from all participants. Alpha diversity (Chao, Observed
Features, Shannon and Simpson indices) and beta diversity (PCoA plot and
PERMANOVA procedure) were analysed. In addition, Linear Discriminant Analysis
Effect Size (LEfSe) was used to identify differential taxa between groups. All
statistical analysis were performed with a 95% confidence level (p < 0.05).
Results: No significant associations were found between ADC and salivary
biochemical markers in either the adult or pediatric age group, suggesting that
these parameters alone may not sufficiently reflect cariogenic activity. Microbiota
analysis at the phylum level did not show significant correlations with ADC;
however, distinct associations appeared at the genus and species levels. In adults,
several genera (Corynebacterium, Porphyromonas, Tannerella, Catonella,
Filifactor, Parvimonas, and Dialister) were positively associated with ADC,
reflecting a shift towards a dysbiotic microbiome composition that overlaps with
periodontal and endodontic pathologies. Conversely, Haemophilus was
negatively correlated with ADC, potentially indicating a protective role. At the
species level, a positive correlation with ADC was found with Porphyromonas
gingivalis, Porphyromonas endodontalis, Peptostreptococcus stomatis,
Leptotrichia buccalis, Prevotella oris, or Corynebacterium matruchotii in the adult
population. In children, microbial associations with caries were more limited, with
Scardovia, a well-known acidogenic genus, positively correlated with ADC, and P.
stomatis showing a negative association. Interestingly, P. stomatis exhibited
opposite correlations in adults and children, possibly reflecting age-specific
ecological roles. No significant differences in alpha or beta diversity were found
either in adults or children participants.