Competition and Caries on Enamel of a Dual-species Biofilm Model of Streptococcus mutans and Streptococcus sanguinis.
2020
Imbalances within the dental biofilm trigger dental caries, currently considered a dysbiosis and the most prevalent non-communicable disease. There is still a gap in knowledge about the dynamics of enamel colonization by bacteria from the dental biofilm in caries. The aim, therefore, was to test whether the sequence of enamel colonization by a typically commensal and a cariogenic species modifies biofilm9s cariogenicity. Dual-species biofilms of Streptococcus mutans (Sm) and Streptococcus sanguinis (Ss) on saliva-coated enamel slabs were inoculated in different sequences: Sm followed by Ss (Sm-Ss), Ss followed by Sm (Ss-Sm), Sm and Ss inoculated at the same time (Sm=Ss) and the single-species controls Sm followed by Sm (Sm-Sm) and Ss followed by Ss (Ss-Ss). Biofilms were exposed to 10% sucrose, 3x/day for 5 days and the slabs/biofilms were retrieved to assess demineralization, viable cells, biomass, proteins, polysaccharides and H2O2 production. When compared with Sm-Sm, primary inoculation with Ss reduced demineralization (p
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