Dental plaque Flashcards

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1
Q

define dental plaque

A

a community of microorganisms that are found on surface of tooth - embedded in a matrix of polymers of salivary and bacterial origin

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2
Q

how does antibiotic effectiveness differ with bacteria in matrix and free flowing bacteria

A

bacteria growing in biofilm matrix are less susceptible to antibiotics

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3
Q

Dental biofilm formation is divided into 7 stages. what are they

A
  1. conditioning film -acquired pellicle 2. transport of microbes-saliva 3. reversible phase- low range, weak 4. irreversible phase- adhesin-receptor 5. co-adhesion 6. growth and matrix synthesis 7. detachment
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4
Q

describe the formation of conditioning film step

A
  1. rapidly formed 2. 1um thick 3. derived from saliva. GCF, and bacteria
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5
Q

the molecules which form the pellicle/ conditoning film have host and bacterial origin. give examples of host derived molecules

A

amylase Immunoglobins Prolin-Rich Proteins mucins statherin agglutinin (antibodies)

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6
Q

give examples of bacterial derived molecules on the pellicle

A

glucans glucosyl-transferase

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7
Q

describe the passive transport of microbes via saliva step

A

transport via saliva weak long-range forces between the bacteria and molecules of pellicle

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8
Q

what is the reversible phase

A

the weak, long rage forces between the bacteria and pellicle are mostly VanDerWaals..thus reversible

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9
Q

describe the irreversible phase

Hidden receptor are called:

A

refers to SPECIFIC ADHESIN-RECEPTOR interactions bacterium= has own bacterial adhesins receptors for such adhesions are either on surface or hidden

cryptitopes

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10
Q

give examples of adhesion-receptor interactions and which bacteria the adhesions belong to

A

Bacterium——-Adhesin——-receptor

streptococcus spp —–antigen 1/11 — bind salivary agglutnin streptococcus mutans……glucan binding protein ——- glucan

actinomyces naeslundii—— type 1 fimbrae — bind PRPs

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11
Q

describe the co-adhesion step

A

gram -ve fusobacterium= bridging molecule between early and late colonisers e.g. -alpha amylase on tooth surface - binds to steptococcus oralis -fusobacterium binds - allows other bacteria/ organisms to bind such as porph gingivalis

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12
Q

describe the biofilm maturation step

A
  1. gram +ve= make peptides= cell signalling
  2. gram -ve= make AutoInducer-2 = cell signalling
  3. within the biofilm will have food chain reactions (glucose—> lactate–> acetate +proponate) (streptococcus and veillonella respectively)
  4. mucins which are glycoproteins are broken down sequentially by glycosidases
  5. within the plaque biofilm, the bacteria are all working together to break down substrates
  6. altered gene expression
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13
Q

why are mucins broken down sequentially

A

increases the time to metabolise less effect on reducing pH

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14
Q

30% of the plaque volume is…

A

bacterial polysaccharides: fructan, glucan, mutan, heteropolymers bacterial polymers: eDNA

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15
Q

sucrose ——-> glucan and ___

which enzyme breaks it down

A

sucrose —> glucan + n-fructose

Glucosyltransferase

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16
Q

sucrose ——> fructan and ___

which enzyme breaks this down

A

sucrose —> frucatan + n-glucose

via Fructosyltransferase

17
Q

describe the detachment step

A

when bacteria sense the environment no longer favourable, synthesise protease enzymes to degrade their adhesion

18
Q

list the key functions of the matrix within the dental plaque

A

protection [e.g. from extreme environment; host defences]

nutritional reserve [e.g. glucans & fructans can be utilised]

stabilises biofilm [e.g. structural support]

interacts with molecules [e.g. retains enzymes, ions, etc]

water retention [e.g. prevents desiccation]

retards penetration of antimicrobials [e.g. charged antibiotics]

19
Q

list antagonistic interactions within microbial communities

A
  1. bacteriocins - made by bac that inhibits neighbouring bacteria (protein that inhibit the growth of similar or closely related bacteria)
  2. hydrogen peroxide - toxic
  3. organic ACIDS
  4. low ph
  5. nutrient competition
20
Q

list beneficial interactions within microbial communities

A

food chain/ web

enzyme complementation

cell-cell signalling

inhibitor neutralisation

subversion of host defences

gene transfer (reistant genes)

21
Q

what is meant by enhanced pathogenicity

A

within the biofilm, there is spatial and functional organisation the organisms all POOL together their properties- prevent the molecules of IS penetrating

22
Q

differences between the early and late stages of biofilm maturation

A

in early there is less diversity, mainly streptococci, mainly aerobic/ facultatively anearobic

by later there is diverse community, highly anearobic, high cell-cell associations and microbial interactions. there is RESILLIENCE AND BALANCE.

23
Q

what structures are seen in a diverse dental biofilm formation

A

‘corn-cob’ structure