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Profiling the Salivary microbiome of the Qatari population
by
Saadaoui, Marwa
, Singh, Parul
, Murugesan, Selvasankar
, Al Ahmad, Sara Fahad
, Al Khodor, Souhaila
, Kumar, Manoj
in
16S rRNA gene sequencing
/ Adult
/ Aged
/ Bacteria
/ Bacteria - genetics
/ Bacteroidetes
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Dental caries
/ Diabetes
/ Disease
/ Diseases
/ Dysbiosis
/ Female
/ Genes
/ Health
/ Health aspects
/ High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
/ Humans
/ Intestinal microflora
/ Male
/ Medical research
/ Medicine/Public Health
/ Methods
/ Microbiomes
/ Microbiota
/ Microbiota (Symbiotic organisms)
/ Nutrition & metabolism
/ Oral health
/ Oral hygiene
/ Population
/ Qatar Biobank
/ Qatari
/ RNA
/ RNA, Ribosomal, 16S - genetics
/ Saliva
/ Salivary diagnostics
/ Studies
/ Tea (Beverage)
/ Teeth
/ Ulcers
2020
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Profiling the Salivary microbiome of the Qatari population
by
Saadaoui, Marwa
, Singh, Parul
, Murugesan, Selvasankar
, Al Ahmad, Sara Fahad
, Al Khodor, Souhaila
, Kumar, Manoj
in
16S rRNA gene sequencing
/ Adult
/ Aged
/ Bacteria
/ Bacteria - genetics
/ Bacteroidetes
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Dental caries
/ Diabetes
/ Disease
/ Diseases
/ Dysbiosis
/ Female
/ Genes
/ Health
/ Health aspects
/ High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
/ Humans
/ Intestinal microflora
/ Male
/ Medical research
/ Medicine/Public Health
/ Methods
/ Microbiomes
/ Microbiota
/ Microbiota (Symbiotic organisms)
/ Nutrition & metabolism
/ Oral health
/ Oral hygiene
/ Population
/ Qatar Biobank
/ Qatari
/ RNA
/ RNA, Ribosomal, 16S - genetics
/ Saliva
/ Salivary diagnostics
/ Studies
/ Tea (Beverage)
/ Teeth
/ Ulcers
2020
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Profiling the Salivary microbiome of the Qatari population
by
Saadaoui, Marwa
, Singh, Parul
, Murugesan, Selvasankar
, Al Ahmad, Sara Fahad
, Al Khodor, Souhaila
, Kumar, Manoj
in
16S rRNA gene sequencing
/ Adult
/ Aged
/ Bacteria
/ Bacteria - genetics
/ Bacteroidetes
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Dental caries
/ Diabetes
/ Disease
/ Diseases
/ Dysbiosis
/ Female
/ Genes
/ Health
/ Health aspects
/ High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
/ Humans
/ Intestinal microflora
/ Male
/ Medical research
/ Medicine/Public Health
/ Methods
/ Microbiomes
/ Microbiota
/ Microbiota (Symbiotic organisms)
/ Nutrition & metabolism
/ Oral health
/ Oral hygiene
/ Population
/ Qatar Biobank
/ Qatari
/ RNA
/ RNA, Ribosomal, 16S - genetics
/ Saliva
/ Salivary diagnostics
/ Studies
/ Tea (Beverage)
/ Teeth
/ Ulcers
2020
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Profiling the Salivary microbiome of the Qatari population
Journal Article
Profiling the Salivary microbiome of the Qatari population
2020
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Overview
Background
The role of the human microbiome in human health and disease has been studied in various body sites. However, compared to the gut microbiome, where most of the research focus is, the salivary microbiome still bears a vast amount of information that needs to be revealed. This study aims to characterize the salivary microbiome composition in the Qatari population, and to explore specific microbial signatures that can be associated with various lifestyles and different oral conditions.
Materials and methods
We characterized the salivary microbiome of 997 Qatari adults using high-throughput sequencing of the V1–V3 region of the 16S rRNA gene.
Results
In this study, we have characterized the salivary microbiome of 997 Qatari participants. Our data show that
Bacteroidetes
,
Firmicutes
,
Actinobacteria
and
Proteobacteria
are the common phyla isolated from the saliva samples, with Bacteroidetes being the most predominant phylum.
Bacteroidetes
was also more predominant in males versus females in the study cohort, although differences in the microbial diversity were not statistically significant. We also show that, a lower diversity of the salivary microbiome is observed in the elderly participants, with
Prevotella
and
Treponema
being the most significant genera. In participants with oral conditions such as mouth ulcers, bleeding or painful gum, our data show that
Prevotella
and
Capnocytophaga
are the most dominant genera as compared to the controls. Similar patterns were observed in participants with various smoking habits as compared to the non-smoking participants. Our data show that
Streptococcus
and
Neisseria
are more dominant among denture users, as compared to the non-denture users. Our data also show that, abnormal oral conditions are associated with a reduced microbial diversity and microbial richness. Moreover, in this study we show that frequent coffee drinkers have higher microbial diversity compared to the non-drinkers, indicating that coffee may cause changes to the salivary microbiome. Furthermore, tea drinkers show higher microbial richness as compared to the non-tea drinkers.
Conclusion
This is the first study to assess the salivary microbiome in an Arab population, and one of the largest population-based studies aiming to the characterize the salivary microbiome composition and its association with age, oral health, denture use, smoking and coffee-tea consumption.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
Subject
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