Identification of temporal shifts of oral bacteria in bone regeneration following mandibular bone defect injury and therapeutic surgery in a porcine model.
Fatemeh SanjarDavid T SillimanIan J JohnsonZayer HtutTrent J PeacockSamira F ThompsonGregory R DionMd A NahidJohn F DeckerKai P LeungPublished in: Molecular oral microbiology (2024)
Independent of IMR versus DMR therapy, we observed similar dysbiosis and shifts of the mucosal bacteria residents after CMF injury and/or following treatment. There was an enrichment of Fusobacterium, Porphyromonadaceae, and Bacteroidales accompanied by a decline in Pasteurellaceae, Moraxella, and Neisseria relative abundance in days allotted for healing. We also observed a decline in species richness and abundance driven by reduction in temporal instability and inter-animal heterogeneity on days 0 and 56, with day 0 corresponding to injury in DMR group and day 56 corresponding to delayed treatment for DMR or injury and immediate treatment for the IMR group. Analysis of bone healing features showed comparable bone-healing profiles for IMR vs. DMR therapeutic approach.