An oral multispecies biofilm model for high content screening applications.

Peri-implantitis caused by multispecies biofilms is a major complication in dental implant treatment. The bacterial infection surrounding dental implants can lead to bone loss and, in turn, to implant failure. A promising strategy to prevent these common complications is the development of implant s...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nadine Kommerein, Sascha N Stumpp, Mathias Müsken, Nina Ehlert, Andreas Winkel, Susanne Häussler, Peter Behrens, Falk F R Buettner, Meike Stiesch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5352027?pdf=render
id doaj-c96ec305b74d4fd9b55c5f695de563f6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c96ec305b74d4fd9b55c5f695de563f62020-11-24T21:09:42ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01123e017397310.1371/journal.pone.0173973An oral multispecies biofilm model for high content screening applications.Nadine KommereinSascha N StumppMathias MüskenNina EhlertAndreas WinkelSusanne HäusslerPeter BehrensFalk F R BuettnerMeike StieschPeri-implantitis caused by multispecies biofilms is a major complication in dental implant treatment. The bacterial infection surrounding dental implants can lead to bone loss and, in turn, to implant failure. A promising strategy to prevent these common complications is the development of implant surfaces that inhibit biofilm development. A reproducible and easy-to-use biofilm model as a test system for large scale screening of new implant surfaces with putative antibacterial potency is therefore of major importance. In the present study, we developed a highly reproducible in vitro four-species biofilm model consisting of the highly relevant oral bacterial species Streptococcus oralis, Actinomyces naeslundii, Veillonella dispar and Porphyromonas gingivalis. The application of live/dead staining, quantitative real time PCR (qRT-PCR), scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and urea-NaCl fluorescence in situ hybridization (urea-NaCl-FISH) revealed that the four-species biofilm community is robust in terms of biovolume, live/dead distribution and individual species distribution over time. The biofilm community is dominated by S. oralis, followed by V. dispar, A. naeslundii and P. gingivalis. The percentage distribution in this model closely reflects the situation in early native plaques and is therefore well suited as an in vitro model test system. Furthermore, despite its nearly native composition, the multispecies model does not depend on nutrient additives, such as native human saliva or serum, and is an inexpensive, easy to handle and highly reproducible alternative to the available model systems. The 96-well plate format enables high content screening for optimized implant surfaces impeding biofilm formation or the testing of multiple antimicrobial treatment strategies to fight multispecies biofilm infections, both exemplary proven in the manuscript.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5352027?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nadine Kommerein
Sascha N Stumpp
Mathias Müsken
Nina Ehlert
Andreas Winkel
Susanne Häussler
Peter Behrens
Falk F R Buettner
Meike Stiesch
spellingShingle Nadine Kommerein
Sascha N Stumpp
Mathias Müsken
Nina Ehlert
Andreas Winkel
Susanne Häussler
Peter Behrens
Falk F R Buettner
Meike Stiesch
An oral multispecies biofilm model for high content screening applications.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Nadine Kommerein
Sascha N Stumpp
Mathias Müsken
Nina Ehlert
Andreas Winkel
Susanne Häussler
Peter Behrens
Falk F R Buettner
Meike Stiesch
author_sort Nadine Kommerein
title An oral multispecies biofilm model for high content screening applications.
title_short An oral multispecies biofilm model for high content screening applications.
title_full An oral multispecies biofilm model for high content screening applications.
title_fullStr An oral multispecies biofilm model for high content screening applications.
title_full_unstemmed An oral multispecies biofilm model for high content screening applications.
title_sort oral multispecies biofilm model for high content screening applications.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Peri-implantitis caused by multispecies biofilms is a major complication in dental implant treatment. The bacterial infection surrounding dental implants can lead to bone loss and, in turn, to implant failure. A promising strategy to prevent these common complications is the development of implant surfaces that inhibit biofilm development. A reproducible and easy-to-use biofilm model as a test system for large scale screening of new implant surfaces with putative antibacterial potency is therefore of major importance. In the present study, we developed a highly reproducible in vitro four-species biofilm model consisting of the highly relevant oral bacterial species Streptococcus oralis, Actinomyces naeslundii, Veillonella dispar and Porphyromonas gingivalis. The application of live/dead staining, quantitative real time PCR (qRT-PCR), scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and urea-NaCl fluorescence in situ hybridization (urea-NaCl-FISH) revealed that the four-species biofilm community is robust in terms of biovolume, live/dead distribution and individual species distribution over time. The biofilm community is dominated by S. oralis, followed by V. dispar, A. naeslundii and P. gingivalis. The percentage distribution in this model closely reflects the situation in early native plaques and is therefore well suited as an in vitro model test system. Furthermore, despite its nearly native composition, the multispecies model does not depend on nutrient additives, such as native human saliva or serum, and is an inexpensive, easy to handle and highly reproducible alternative to the available model systems. The 96-well plate format enables high content screening for optimized implant surfaces impeding biofilm formation or the testing of multiple antimicrobial treatment strategies to fight multispecies biofilm infections, both exemplary proven in the manuscript.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5352027?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT nadinekommerein anoralmultispeciesbiofilmmodelforhighcontentscreeningapplications
AT saschanstumpp anoralmultispeciesbiofilmmodelforhighcontentscreeningapplications
AT mathiasmusken anoralmultispeciesbiofilmmodelforhighcontentscreeningapplications
AT ninaehlert anoralmultispeciesbiofilmmodelforhighcontentscreeningapplications
AT andreaswinkel anoralmultispeciesbiofilmmodelforhighcontentscreeningapplications
AT susannehaussler anoralmultispeciesbiofilmmodelforhighcontentscreeningapplications
AT peterbehrens anoralmultispeciesbiofilmmodelforhighcontentscreeningapplications
AT falkfrbuettner anoralmultispeciesbiofilmmodelforhighcontentscreeningapplications
AT meikestiesch anoralmultispeciesbiofilmmodelforhighcontentscreeningapplications
AT nadinekommerein oralmultispeciesbiofilmmodelforhighcontentscreeningapplications
AT saschanstumpp oralmultispeciesbiofilmmodelforhighcontentscreeningapplications
AT mathiasmusken oralmultispeciesbiofilmmodelforhighcontentscreeningapplications
AT ninaehlert oralmultispeciesbiofilmmodelforhighcontentscreeningapplications
AT andreaswinkel oralmultispeciesbiofilmmodelforhighcontentscreeningapplications
AT susannehaussler oralmultispeciesbiofilmmodelforhighcontentscreeningapplications
AT peterbehrens oralmultispeciesbiofilmmodelforhighcontentscreeningapplications
AT falkfrbuettner oralmultispeciesbiofilmmodelforhighcontentscreeningapplications
AT meikestiesch oralmultispeciesbiofilmmodelforhighcontentscreeningapplications
_version_ 1716757760474873856