Bacterial Community Modifies Host Genetics Effect on Early Childhood Caries.

IF 8.3 2区 材料科学 Q1 MATERIALS SCIENCE, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces Pub Date : 2023-09-01 Epub Date: 2023-07-03 DOI:10.1177/00220345231175356
F Blostein, T Zou, D Bhaumik, E Salzman, K M Bakulski, J R Shaffer, M L Marazita, B Foxman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

By age 5, approximately one-fifth of children have early childhood caries (ECC). Both the oral microbiome and host genetics are thought to influence susceptibility. Whether the oral microbiome modifies genetic susceptibility to ECC has not been tested. We test whether the salivary bacteriome modifies the association of a polygenic score (PGS, a score derived from genomic data that summarizes genetic susceptibility to disease) for primary tooth decay on ECC in the Center for Oral Health Research in Appalachia 2 longitudinal birth cohort. Children were genotyped using the Illumina Multi-Ethnic Genotyping Array and underwent annual dental examinations. We constructed a PGS for primary tooth decay using weights from an independent, genome-wide association meta-analysis. Using Poisson regression, we tested for associations between the PGS (high versus low) and ECC incidence, adjusting for demographic characteristics (n = 783). An incidence-density sampled subset of the cohort (n = 138) had salivary bacteriome data at 24 mo of age. We tested for effect modification of the PGS on ECC case status by salivary bacterial community state type (CST). By 60 mo, 20.69% of children had ECC. High PGS was not associated with an increased rate of ECC (incidence rate ratio, 1.09; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.83-1.42). However, having a cariogenic salivary bacterial CST at 24 mo was associated with ECC (odds ratio [OR], 7.48; 95% CI, 3.06-18.26), which was robust to PGS adjustment. An interaction existed between the salivary bacterial CST and the PGS on the multiplicative scale (P = 0.04). The PGS was associated with ECC (OR, 4.83; 95% CI, 1.29-18.17) only among individuals with a noncariogenic salivary bacterial CST (n = 70). Genetic causes of caries may be harder to detect when not accounting for cariogenic oral microbiomes. As certain salivary bacterial CSTs increased ECC risk across genetic risk strata, preventing colonization of cariogenic microbiomes would be universally beneficial.

细菌群落改变宿主对儿童早期龋齿的遗传效应。
到5岁时,大约五分之一的儿童患有儿童早期龋齿(ECC)。口腔微生物组和宿主遗传学都被认为会影响易感性。口腔微生物组是否改变ECC的遗传易感性尚未得到测试。我们在阿巴拉契亚口腔健康研究中心2纵向出生队列中测试唾液菌组是否改变ECC原发性蛀牙的多基因评分(PGS,一种源自基因组数据的评分,总结疾病的遗传易感性)的相关性。使用Illumina多民族基因分型阵列对儿童进行基因分型,并每年进行牙科检查。我们使用一项独立的全基因组关联荟萃分析的权重构建了一个用于原发性蛀牙的PGS。使用泊松回归,我们测试了PGS(高与低)与ECC发病率之间的相关性,并根据人口统计学特征进行了调整(n=783)。队列的发病率密度抽样子集(n=138)在24个月大时有唾液细菌组数据。我们测试了唾液细菌群落状态类型(CST)对PGS对ECC病例状态的影响。到60个月,20.69%的儿童患有ECC。高PGS与ECC发生率增加无关(发病率比1.09;95%置信区间[CI],0.83-1.42)。然而,在24个月时出现致龋唾液细菌CST与ECC相关(比值比[OR],7.48;95%可信区间3.06-18.26),这对PGS的调整是稳健的。唾液细菌CST和PGS之间存在倍增性相互作用(P=0.04)。PGS与ECC相关(OR,4.83;95%CI,1.29-18.17),仅在非致癌唾液细菌CST的个体中(n=70)。如果不考虑致龋口腔微生物群,龋齿的遗传原因可能更难检测。由于某些唾液细菌CST增加了遗传风险阶层的ECC风险,因此预防致龋微生物群的定植将是普遍有益的。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces 工程技术-材料科学:综合
CiteScore
16.00
自引率
6.30%
发文量
4978
审稿时长
1.8 months
期刊介绍: ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces is a leading interdisciplinary journal that brings together chemists, engineers, physicists, and biologists to explore the development and utilization of newly-discovered materials and interfacial processes for specific applications. Our journal has experienced remarkable growth since its establishment in 2009, both in terms of the number of articles published and the impact of the research showcased. We are proud to foster a truly global community, with the majority of published articles originating from outside the United States, reflecting the rapid growth of applied research worldwide.
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