Abstract

The aim of this study was to explore the microbial communities of endodontic infections at their apical portion by 16S rRNA Illumina sequencing and delineate the core microbiome of root canal infections and that of their associated clinical symptomatology. Samples were collected from fifteen subjects presenting one tooth with a root canal infection, and their associated symptoms were recorded. Samples were collected from the apical third of roots using a #10 K file and then amplified using multiple displacement amplification and PCR-amplified with universal primers. Amplicons were sequenced (V3–V4 hypervariable region of the 16S rRNA gene) using MiSeq (Illumina, CA). The microbial composition of the samples was determined using QIIME and HOMINGS. Data were analyzed using t tests and ANOVA. A total of 1,038,656 good quality sequences were obtained, and OTUs were assigned to 10 bacterial phyla, led by Bacteroidetes (51.2%) and Firmicutes (27.1%), and 94 genera were represented primarily by Prevotella (17.9%) and Bacteroidaceae G-1 (14.3%). Symptomatic teeth were associated with higher levels of Porphyromonas (p < 0.05) and Prevotella. P. endodontalis and P. oris were present in both cores. The present study demonstrated the complexity of the root canal microbiome and the “common denominators” of root canal infections and identified taxa whose virulence properties should be further explored. The polymicrobial etiology of endodontic infections has long been established. However, few studies have focused on expanding the breadth and depth of coverage of microbiome-infected root canals at their apical portion.

Highlights

  • The aim of this study was to explore the microbial communities of endodontic infections at their apical portion by 16S rRNA Illumina sequencing and delineate the core microbiome of root canal infections and that of their associated clinical symptomatology

  • There is overwhelming evidence to support that an unspecific microbial community is able to induce periapical lesion ­development[4,7,11]

  • Knowing that the apical portion of the root canal infection harbors a distinct microbiome from its coronal segment, this study aimed to explore the microbiome of the apical portion of the root canal through metagenetics approaches and its association with clinical symptomatology

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Summary

Introduction

The aim of this study was to explore the microbial communities of endodontic infections at their apical portion by 16S rRNA Illumina sequencing and delineate the core microbiome of root canal infections and that of their associated clinical symptomatology. Few studies have focused on expanding the breadth and depth of coverage of microbiome-infected root canals at their apical portion. Few studies have focused on the analysis of the most apical portion of endodontic infections. This gap in the current literature has precluded a better picture of the root canal core microbiome and its associated clinical parameters. H­ OMINGS22–24 utilized the speed and efficiency of next-generation sequencing combined with the refinement of bacterial species-level identification based on 16S rDNA ­comparisons[17]

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