Abstract

Periodontitis is an inflammatory disease that deteriorates bone supporting teeth afflicting ∼743 million people worldwide. Bacterial communities associated with disease have been classified into red, orange, purple, blue, green, and yellow complexes based on their roles in the periodontal pocket. Previous metagenomic and metatranscriptomics analyses suggest a common shift in metabolic signatures in disease vs. healthy communities with up-regulated processes including pyruvate fermentation, histidine degradation, amino acid metabolism, TonB-dependent receptors. In this work, we examine existing metatranscriptome datasets to identify the commonly differentially expressed transcripts and potential underlying RNA regulatory mechanisms behind the metabolic shifts. Raw RNA-seq reads from three studies (including 49 healthy and 48 periodontitis samples) were assembled into transcripts de novo. Analyses revealed 859 differentially expressed (DE) transcripts, 675 more- and 174 less-expressed. Only ∼20% of the DE transcripts originate from the pathogenic red/orange complexes, and ∼50% originate from organisms unaffiliated with a complex. Comparison of expression profiles revealed variations among disease samples; while specific metabolic processes are commonly up-regulated, the underlying organisms are diverse both within and across disease associated communities. Surveying DE transcripts for known ncRNAs from the Rfam database identified a large number of tRNAs and tmRNAs as well as riboswitches (FMN, glycine, lysine, and SAM) in more prevalent transcripts and the cobalamin riboswitch in both more and less prevalent transcripts. In silico discovery identified many putative ncRNAs in DE transcripts. We report 15 such putative ncRNAs having promising covariation in the predicted secondary structure and interesting genomic context. Seven of these are antisense of ribosomal proteins that are novel and may involve maintaining ribosomal protein stoichiometry during the disease associated metabolic shift. Our findings describe the role of organisms previously unaffiliated with disease and identify the commonality in progression of disease across three metatranscriptomic studies. We find that although the communities are diverse between individuals, the switch in metabolic signatures characteristic of disease is typically achieved through the contributions of several community members. Furthermore, we identify many ncRNAs (both known and putative) which may facilitate the metabolic shifts associated with periodontitis.

Highlights

  • Afflicting more than three million individuals in the United States per year, periodontitis is an oral disease characterized by inflammation of the periodontium that eventually leads to tooth loss

  • A Fraction of the Differentially Expressed (DE) Transcripts Originate From Red/Orange Complexes

  • In addition to ribosomal proteins, we find down-regulated transcripts antisense to genes involved in sugar metabolism. ncRNA-56 was identified in the Klebsiella pneumoniae located antisense to the beginning of the beta-galactosidase gene, and is extremely down-regulated (-6.8 fold)

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Summary

Introduction

Afflicting more than three million individuals in the United States per year, periodontitis is an oral disease characterized by inflammation of the periodontium (resulting from poor oral hygiene) that eventually leads to tooth loss. Circumventing the limitations of culture-based techniques, 16S rRNA sequencing from the subgingival plaques of 50 individuals with advanced periodontitis revealed eight key periodontal pathogens: Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans, Bacteroides forsythus ( Tannerella forsythia), Campylobacter rectus, Eikenella corrodens, Porphyromonas gingivalis, Prevotella intermedia, Prevotella nigrescens, and Treponema denticola (Ashimoto et al, 1996), and further screening expanded the list of periodontal pathogens to include members of Deferribacteres, Bacteroidetes, OP11, and TM7 phyla, and several novel species including Eubacterium saphenum, Porphyromonas endodontalis, Prevotella denticola, and Cryptobacterium curtum (Kumar et al, 2003). A subsequent high-throughput DNA hybridization study of periodontitis progression in 185 individuals revealed six complexes of disease associated organisms characteristic of distinct stages of disease progression (red, orange, yellow, green, blue and purple) (Socransky et al, 1998). Members of the other four complexes (purple, blue, yellow, and green) partake in the initial colonization of the periodontal pocket causing a cascading effect leading toward the orange and red complexes (Socransky and Haffajee, 2005)

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