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Article Dans Une Revue Molecular Oral Microbiology Année : 2016

Bacteria and archaea paleomicrobiology of the dental calculus: a review

Résumé

Dental calculus, a material observed in the majority of adults worldwide, emerged as a source for correlating paleomicrobiology with human health and diet. This mini review of 48 articles on the paleomicrobiology of dental calculus over 7550years discloses a secular core microbiota comprising nine bacterial phyla - Firmicutes, Actinobacteria, Proteobacteria, Bacteroidetes, TM7, Synergistetes, Chloroflexi, Fusobacteria, Spirochetes - and one archaeal phylum Euryarchaeota; and some accessory microbiota that appear and disappear according to time frame. The diet residues and oral microbes, including bacteria, archaea, viruses and fungi, consisting of harmless organisms and pathogens associated with local and systemic infections have been found trapped in ancient dental calculus by morphological approaches, immunolabeling techniques, isotope analyses, fluorescent insitu hybridization, DNA-based approaches, and protein-based approaches. These observations led to correlation of paleomicrobiology, particularly Streptococcus mutans and archaea, with past human health and diet.

Dates et versions

hal-01458389 , version 1 (06-02-2017)

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H. T. T. Huynh, J. Verneau, A. Levasseur, Michel Drancourt, G. Aboudharam. Bacteria and archaea paleomicrobiology of the dental calculus: a review. Molecular Oral Microbiology, 2016, 31 (3), pp.234-242. ⟨10.1111/omi.12118⟩. ⟨hal-01458389⟩
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