Gender Variations in the Oral Microbiomes of Elderly Patients with Initial Periodontitis

Periodontitis is a globally prevalent disease that imposes a functional and aesthetic burden on patients. The oral microbiome influences human health. The aim of this study was at assessing gender variation in the subgingival bacterial microbiome of elderly patients with initial periodontitis and to...

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Published inJournal of immunology research Vol. 2021; pp. 7403042 - 16
Main Authors Zhao, Jie, Zhou, Ying-Hui, Zhao, Ya-Qiong, Feng, Yao, Yan, Fei, Gao, Zheng-Rong, Ye, Qin, Chen, Yun, Liu, Qiong, Tan, Li, Zhang, Shao-Hui, Hu, Jing, Dusenge, Marie Aimee, Feng, Yun-Zhi, Guo, Yue
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Egypt Hindawi 2021
Hindawi Limited
Wiley
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Summary:Periodontitis is a globally prevalent disease that imposes a functional and aesthetic burden on patients. The oral microbiome influences human health. The aim of this study was at assessing gender variation in the subgingival bacterial microbiome of elderly patients with initial periodontitis and to determine the causes of this variation. Twelve males and twenty females (range 50–68 years old) with initial periodontitis provided subgingival plaque samples. 16S rRNA gene sequencing, QIIME-based data processing, and statistical analyses were carried out using several different analytical approaches to detect differences in the oral microbiome between the two groups. Males had higher Chao1 index, observed species, and phylogenetic diversity whole tree values than females. Analysis of β-diversity indicated that the samples were reasonably divided by the gender. The linear discriminant analysis effect size showed that the most representative biomarkers were the genus Haemophilus in males, whereas the dominant bacteria in females were Campylobacter. Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes analysis showed that predicting changes in the female oral microbiota may be related to the immune system and immune system diseases are the main factor in males. These data suggest that gender may be a differentiating factor in the microbial composition of subgingival plaques in elderly patients with initial periodontitis. These results could deepen our understanding of the role of gender in the oral microbiota present during initial periodontitis.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
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Academic Editor: E. Xiao
ISSN:2314-8861
2314-7156
DOI:10.1155/2021/7403042