Abstract

AbstractPeriodontitis development is strongly associated with the succession of the oral microbiome. However, the knowledge about the succession of the oral microbiome in the development of periodontitis remains insufficient. In the present study, an analysis was conducted on the succession of tongue back, the saliva (Sal) microbiome, and gingival crevicular fluid (GCF) from healthy individuals and patients with mild (CPL), moderate (CPM), severe chronic (CPH), and generalized aggressive periodontitis (GAgP). The composition and structure of the oral microbiome gradually changed with the increasing severity of periodontitis, among which GCF showed the highest correlation with periodontitis. With an ecological preference, pathogens in the mouth varied with the development of periodontitis. In healthy and CPL patients, Sal‐derived microorganisms accounted for a large proportion of GCF but exhibited a decrease in patients with CPM, CPH, and GAgP. Permutation and time course sequencing analysis revealed that a variety of microorganisms changed with the severity of periodontitis. A majority of these microorganisms are closely related to clinical periodontal indices. Ecological analysis suggested that the composition of oral microbial communities at different stages of periodontitis is controlled by random processes. The comparison of microbial interaction networks demonstrated that a series of key microorganisms drive oral health to severe periodontitis. In this study, the relationship between the succession process of the oral microbiota and the development of periodontitis was revealed.

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