Abstract

New Findings What is the central question of this study? What are the relationships between physical properties of saliva, protein composition and metabolite composition? What is the main finding and its importance? Salivary citrate, one of the major endogenous metabolites in saliva, increased upon capsaicin stimulation and was associated with improved physical properties measured by extensional rheology. This suggests salivary gland citrate transporters might be a valuable area of future study. Saliva displays viscoelastic properties which enable coating, lubrication and protection of the oral mucosa and hard tissues. Individuals lacking saliva or perceiving oral dryness can manage their symptoms using artificial saliva preparations, but these often fail to mimic the sensation and functionality of natural saliva. It is widely acknowledged that mucins (MUC7 and MUC5B) confer saliva's rheological properties, but artificial saliva containing purified mucins is still often an inadequate substitute. This work aimed to explore salivary components that influence salivary extensional rheology to better understand how natural saliva could be replicated. Saliva was stimulated via control and capsaicin solutions in healthy volunteers. Extensional rheology was analysed using a CaBER‐1 (capillary breakup) extensional rheometer. Protein composition, including mucins, was measured by gel‐electrophoresis band densitometry and metabolites were measured by 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Capsaicin stimulation significantly increased capillary breakup time, extensional viscosity and the abundance of most major salivary proteins. Stimulation also increased salivary citrate and choline concentrations. Significant correlations were found between capillary breakup time and amylase (r = 0.67, P < 0.05), statherin (ρ = 0.66, P < 0.05) and citrate (ρ = 0.81, P < 0.01). The relationship between citrate and salivary rheology was subsequently investigated in vitro. These results suggest that citrate and non‐mucin proteins are stronger predictors of salivary rheology than the more often studied mucin glycoproteins. Potential mechanisms are discussed and future work in this area could help formulate more effective saliva substitutes, more closely resembling natural saliva.

Highlights

  • Saliva serves multiple critical roles in the process of eating

  • The relationship between citrate and salivary rheology was subsequently investigated in vitro. These results suggest that citrate and non-mucin proteins are stronger predictors of salivary rheology than the more often studied mucin glycoproteins

  • Major salivary proteins measured by band densitometry were MUC5B, MUC7, amylase, PRP, cystatin and statherin

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Saliva serves multiple critical roles in the process of eating. These include facilitating taste perception, mastication, bolus formation and preliminary digestion (Pedersen, Sørensen, Proctor, Carpenter, & Ekström, 2018). Sufferers of hyposalivation (a demonstrable reduction in salivary flow rate) or xerostomia (perceived oral dryness with adequate flow rate, but potentially altered salivary composition) experience a multitude of adverse oral symptoms (Villa, Connell, & Abati, 2015). These individuals experience greater risk of nutritional deficiency (Rhodus & Brown, 1990), respiratory infection (Iwabuchi, Fujibayashi, Yamane, Imai, & Nakao, 2012) and potentially all-cause mortality (Iwasaki et al, 2018). Of particular importance to salivary function are the physical properties displayed by whole mouth saliva. These include visco-elastic behaviour allowing lubrication and coating of the oral mucosa.

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call