精氨酸脱氨酶
口腔微生物群
微生物群
微生物学
放线菌
细菌
生物
代谢途径
生物化学
化学
新陈代谢
氨基酸
微生物代谢
精氨酸
生物信息学
遗传学
标识
DOI:10.1177/0022034515606045
摘要
Recent advances in molecular biology have facilitated analyses of the oral microbiome (“Who are they?”); however, its functions (e.g., metabolic activities) are poorly understood (“What are they doing?”). This review aims to summarize our current understanding of the metabolism of the oral microbiome. Saccharolytic bacteria—including Streptococcus, Actinomyces, and Lactobacillus species—degrade carbohydrates into organic acids via the Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway and several of its branch pathways, resulting in dental caries, while alkalization and acid neutralization via the arginine deiminase system, urease, and so on, counteract acidification. Proteolytic/amino acid–degrading bacteria, including Prevotella and Porphyromonas species, break down proteins and peptides into amino acids and degrade them further via specific pathways to produce short-chain fatty acids, ammonia, sulfur compounds, and indole/skatole, which act as virulent and modifying factors in periodontitis and oral malodor. Furthermore, it is suggested that ethanol-derived acetaldehyde can cause oral cancer, while nitrate-derived nitrite can aid caries prevention and systemic health. Microbial metabolic activity is influenced by the oral environment; however, it can also modify the oral environment, enhance the pathogenicity of bacteria, and induce microbial selection to create more pathogenic microbiome. Taking a metabolomic approach to analyzing the oral microbiome is crucial to improving our understanding of the functions of the oral microbiome.
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