Abstract

The periodontal microbiome is known to be altered during pregnancy as well as by smoking. However, despite the fact that 2.1 million women in the United States smoke during their pregnancy, the potentially synergistic effects of smoking and pregnancy on the subgingival microbiome have never been studied. Subgingival plaque was collected from 44 systemically and periodontally healthy non-pregnant nonsmokers (control), non-pregnant smokers, pregnant nonsmokers and pregnant smokers and sequenced using 16S-pyrotag sequencing. 331601 classifiable sequences were compared against HOMD. Community ordination methods and co-occurrence networks were used along with non-parametric tests to identify differences between groups. Linear Discriminant Analysis revealed significant clustering based on pregnancy and smoking status. Alpha diversity was similar between groups, however, pregnant women (smokers and nonsmokers) demonstrated higher levels of gram-positive and gram-negative facultatives, and lower levels of gram-negative anaerobes when compared to smokers. Each environmental perturbation induced distinctive co-occurrence patterns between species, with unique network anchors in each group. Our study thus suggests that the impact of each environmental perturbation on the periodontal microbiome is unique, and that when they are superimposed, the sum is greater than its parts. The persistence of these effects following cessation of the environmental disruption warrants further investigation.

Highlights

  • The periodontal microbiome is known to be altered during pregnancy as well as by smoking

  • While earlier studies implicated certain species collectively known as black-pigmented Bacteroides (BPB) in the etiopathogenesis of pregnancy gingivitis, open-ended studies have been equivocal regarding the effect of pregnancy on the abundance of these species

  • Pregnant smokers demonstrated cluster anchors that were not seen in either pregnant women or in smokers, namely, Bradyrhizobium spp., Herbaspirillum, E.coli, Prevotella melalinogenica, and Prevotella spp., along with Corynebacetrium spp., Dialister spp., and Tannerella spp. It has been known for a number of decades that both the prevalence and severity of gingivitis is greater in pregnant women than in non-pregnant controls[26,27,28,29]

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Summary

Introduction

The periodontal microbiome is known to be altered during pregnancy as well as by smoking. Our study suggests that the impact of each environmental perturbation on the periodontal microbiome is unique, and that when they are superimposed, the sum is greater than its parts. The oral cavity plays host to a large and diverse group of bacteria; which form biofilm communities in several habitats within the mouth, including the tooth, subgingival sulcus, tongue, buccal mucosa and tonsils[1]. Earlier studies from our laboratory and others have highlighted the role of an environmental press - cigarette smoking - in changing the oral microbiome; by decreasing the levels of beneficial species, and promoting a pathogen-rich microbial community within 24-hours of biofilm formation[8,12,17,18,19] thereby increasing the risk for periodontitis

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