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The supragingival biofilm in early childhood caries: clinical and laboratory protocols and bioinformatics pipelines supporting metagenomics, metatranscriptomics, and metabolomics studies of the oral microbiome
Department of Pediatric Dentistry, UNC School of Dentistry, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, NC, Chapel Hill, United States; Department of Epidemiology, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, NC, Chapel Hill, United States.
Umeå University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Odontology. Broad Institute of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University, MA, Cambridge, United States.
Department of Epidemiology, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, NC, Chapel Hill, United States; Biospecimen Core Processing Facility, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, NC, Chapel Hill, United States.
Department of Epidemiology, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, NC, Chapel Hill, United States; Biospecimen Core Processing Facility, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, NC, Chapel Hill, United States.
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2019 (English)In: Odontogenesis: methods and protocols / [ed] Petros Papagerakis, Humana Press, 2019, , p. 24p. 525-548Chapter in book (Refereed)
Abstract [en]

Early childhood caries (ECC) is a biofilm-mediated disease. Social, environmental, and behavioral determinants as well as innate susceptibility are major influences on its incidence; however, from a pathogenetic standpoint, the disease is defined and driven by oral dysbiosis. In other words, the disease occurs when the natural equilibrium between the host and its oral microbiome shifts toward states that promote demineralization at the biofilm-tooth surface interface. Thus, a comprehensive understanding of dental caries as a disease requires the characterization of both the composition and the function or metabolic activity of the supragingival biofilm according to well-defined clinical statuses. However, taxonomic and functional information of the supragingival biofilm is rarely available in clinical cohorts, and its collection presents unique challenges among very young children. This paper presents a protocol and pipelines available for the conduct of supragingival biofilm microbiome studies among children in the primary dentition, that has been designed in the context of a large-scale population-based genetic epidemiologic study of ECC. The protocol is being developed for the collection of two supragingival biofilm samples from the maxillary primary dentition, enabling downstream taxonomic (e.g., metagenomics) and functional (e.g., transcriptomics and metabolomics) analyses. The protocol is being implemented in the assembly of a pediatric precision medicine cohort comprising over 6000 participants to date, contributing social, environmental, behavioral, clinical, and biological data informing ECC and other oral health outcomes.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Humana Press, 2019. , p. 24p. 525-548
Series
Methods in molecular biology, ISSN 1064-3745, E-ISSN 1940-6029 ; 1922
Keywords [en]
Children, Dental caries, Metabolome, Microbiome, Protocol, Transcriptome
National Category
Dentistry
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-203377DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4939-9012-2_40ISI: 000683378900039PubMedID: 30838598Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85058862412ISBN: 9781493990115 (print)ISBN: 9781493990122 (electronic)OAI: oai:DiVA.org:umu-203377DiVA, id: diva2:1729145
Funder
NIH (National Institutes of Health)Swedish Research Council, 4.1-2016-00416Available from: 2023-01-19 Created: 2023-01-19 Last updated: 2025-04-24Bibliographically approved

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Shungin, Dmitry

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