Abstract

Samples of human dental plaque were examined for the presence of methanogenic bacteria. Of 54 samples from 36 patients, 20 yielded H2/CO2-using methanogenic enrichment cultures. All methanogen-positive samples were from patients with some degree of periodontal disease. The predominant populations in the enrichments had morphologies characteristic of Methanobrevibacter spp. In six enrichments derived from three patients, the common methanogen was antigenically similar to Methanobrevibacter smithii. The same was true for the three methanogenic isolates obtained in axenic culture from a fourth patient. The six enrichments and two of the three isolates were antigenically closer to strain ALI than to PS. Two of the enrichments also had subpopulations with weak antigenic similarity to Methanosphaera stadtmanae. The data indicate that methanogens in the oral cavity of humans are antigenically close to those found in the intestinal tract.

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