TRANSMISSION OF ORAL PREVOTELLA-MELANINOGENICA BETWEEN A MOTHER AND HER YOUNG-CHILD

Citation
E. Kononen et al., TRANSMISSION OF ORAL PREVOTELLA-MELANINOGENICA BETWEEN A MOTHER AND HER YOUNG-CHILD, Oral microbiology and immunology, 9(5), 1994, pp. 310-314
Citations number
38
Categorie Soggetti
Immunology,Microbiology
ISSN journal
09020055
Volume
9
Issue
5
Year of publication
1994
Pages
310 - 314
Database
ISI
SICI code
0902-0055(1994)9:5<310:TOOPBA>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
Most likely, young children acquire their oral microflora by frequent transfer of bacteria between family members. The possible transmission of obligately anaerobic Prevotella melaninogenica recovered from 11 m other-child pairs was examined by ribotyping. One to 18 isolates (mean 13) per child from different oral sampling sites and 4 to 17 (mean 10 ) isolates per mother from stimulated salivary samples, collected on 2 occasions, were analyzed. On sampling, the mean ages of the children were 4 months and 32 months, respectively. Restriction endonucleases K pnI and ClaI were chosen for the digestion of chromosomal DNA. DNA fra gments were electrophoretically separated, blotted onto a nylon membra ne and hybridized with rRNA operon of Escherichia coli. DNA-DNA hybrid s were detected immunologically. Extensive genetic heterogeneity, 101 distinct ribotypes, was observed among 248 P. melaninogenica isolates studied. Both mothers and children harbored several (up to 7) ribotype s which, apart from 3 ribotypes, were distinguishable in unrelated sub jects. Several P. melaninogenica ribotypes were detected on both sampl ing occasions over 2 years apart. Identical ribotypes were found in 6 of the 11 mother-child pairs, 1 to 2 similar ribotypes per pair. This suggests the transmission of P. melaninogenica between the mother and her child, probably via maternal saliva. However, the unique ribotypes found in these children also indicate that other sources besides the mother influence the oral colonization of young children.