Comparative Study
Journal Article
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A comprehensive profiling of supragingival bacterial composition in Chinese twin children and their mothers.

To investigate the factors influencing the oral microbiome, 16 twin pairs and their mothers were enrolled in this study. There were 7 monozygotic (MZ) twins and 9 dizygotic (DZ) twins, with an average age of 6.18 ± 3.5. Supragingival plaques and caries tissues were collected and the 16S rDNA was analyzed by 454 pyrosequencing. A total of 18 phyla and 179 genuses were found. Caries children harbored a higher portion of Actinobacteria than caries-free ones, and one lineage was found to be less abundant in the caries tissues compared to the supragingival plaque at each level from the phylum down to the genus level, which was Fusobacteria at Phylum, Fusobacteriia at Class, Fusobacteriales at Order, Leptotrichiaceae at Family and Leptotrichia at genus level. The adults harbored a significantly higher portion of Treponema, which may be related to adult periodontitis. The phylogenetic tree showed that there was a high similarity of oral microbiota within co-twins, but no significant difference was detected between MZ and DZ twins. Also, the similarity level of primary dentition children to their mother was significantly higher than that of mixed dentition children, suggesting that environmental factors may have a stronger impact than the genetic factors on the constitution of the oral microbiome.

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