M13- plaque Flashcards

1
Q

what is plaque?

A

the general term for the microbial community found on the tooth surface

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2
Q

Describe plaque.

A

– Associated with hard & soft-tissue surfaces
– Contains living & dead bacteria
– Includes extra-cellular bacterial products
– Involves host compounds

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3
Q

what is plaque essentially?

A

biofilm

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4
Q

what is a biofilm?

A

Name given to microbial communities attached to a surface “complex aggregation of bacteria”

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5
Q

what are the properties of a typical biofilm?

A

– spatially organized in a 3 dimensional structure
– bacterial cells enclosed in extra-cellular matrix
– increases habitat range of individual bacteria

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6
Q

How much bacteria exists as biofilms?

A

65% of human infections

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7
Q

what is the organic matrix of dental plaque?

A

glycocalyx or extracellular polymeric substances

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8
Q

How much space does the extracellular polymeric substance take up of dental plaque volume?

A

30%

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9
Q

what is the acquired pellicle?

A

the layer of material acquired by a cleaned tooth

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10
Q

what are the features of the acquired pellicle?

A

– < 1μms thick
– Mucins, salivary glycoproteins, minerals & immunoglobins
– Occurs in seconds (90-120 minutes for maximum thickness)
– Reaches a peak after which composition & form can still change
– Different Pellicles form on different oral surfaces
• (Enamel, Cementum, Oral Mucosa)
– Can be removed by vigorous brushing with an abrasive dentifrice

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11
Q

what does bacteria attach to?

A

Bacteria do not attach/adhere directly to the enamel they attach to the pellicle.

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12
Q

what type of reaction is the initial attachment?

A

reversible and non-specific interaction

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13
Q

Describe long range and short range bonding after contact.

A
  • Long range (weak) - 100nm /Van Der Waal’s forces / electrostatic forces
  • short range (strong) - <2nm /hydrogen bonding
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14
Q

what charge do most salivary glycoproteins have and what is the reason for this?

A
  • negative charged

- sialic acid groups present

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15
Q

what forms between enamel and bacterial cell wall?

A

calcium bridge ( acquired pellicle )

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16
Q

how does the calicium bridge form?

A
  • enamel -weak negative charge so positive calico ions stick to the pockets of weak negative charge
  • calcium supersaturated
17
Q

Describe the cell wall component of lipoteichoic acid and what it binds to.

A

– Gram +ve Cell wall
– amphipathic molecules
– one end lipid & hydrophobic (in membrane)
– one end glycerol phosphate & hydrophilic (-ve charge)
– bind blood group substances found in the pellicle

18
Q

what effects adhesion of bacteria to pellicle?

A

• Ordered accumulation
– (Pioneer to Climax community)
• Frequency & relative affinity of each bacterium for the pellicle
• Attachment/adhesion, growth, and removal
• Changing environment
– aerobic-anaerobic
– pH, nutrients, ions, metabolic products
– New attachment sites, co-aggregation

19
Q

what type of reaction is bacterial adhesion?

A

specific receptor-mediated interactions

20
Q

what is considered the hallmark of transition to biofilm from pellicle?

A

bacterial extracellular polymeric substances - production normally associated with irreversible attachment

21
Q

what helps attachment?

A
  • adhesins

- fimbriae

22
Q

what type of response is polysaccharide production?

A

adaptive response

23
Q

what supports polysaccharide synthesis?

A

sucrose

24
Q

what enzyme breaks down glucose and produces longer chains of glucose?

A

glucosyltransferase

25
Q

what can be a major component of extracellular polymeric substances?

A

extracellular DNA

26
Q

what does DNAse do?

A

releases bacteria and inhibits biofilm formation

27
Q

what are adhesions?

A

– specific molecules on
bacterial surface
– recognize specific ligands or receptors on the tooth surface
– Often associated with fimbriae

28
Q

what is lectin?

A

– Sugar binding proteins
– Recognize carbohydrate groups & bind them
– Often associated with fimbriae

29
Q

What is fimbriae?

A

– “Hair-like” proteinacous appendages
– adhesion to enamel/pellicle
– adhesion to other bacteria
(which may contain adhesions)

30
Q

Give features of streptococcus crista.

A
  • Fibrils tend to thinner & more flexible than fimbriae
  • Characteristic tuft arrangement of fibrils
  • Allow coadhesion
31
Q

Give overview of plaque development.

A

• Gram +ve & Gram -ve cocci within 2 hours
– Gram +ve : Oralis gp (mitis, oralis, sanguinis)
– Gram -ve : Neisseria, Haemophilus
• microcolonies form & spread across the tooth surface
– confluent biofilm develops
• 24 hours Streptococci predominate (95%)
– S. sanguinis most common

32
Q

what are the 3 stages of succession?

A

Stage 1;
Streptococcus spp. (32-82%) attach to acquired pellicle
Stage 2;
Streps joined/replaced e.g. Actinomyces spp.
Stage 3;
Gram -ve species e.g. Fusobacterium

33
Q

what changes are seen during the first week?

A

• Increased diversity of Gram +ve bacteria
– Actinomyces naeslundii
– Actinomyces israelii
• Pioneer species reduce Eh (anaerobic)
– anaerobe species survive & multiply
• Actinomyces & anaerobes increase
– Streptococci decrease (as a proportion!)

34
Q

what are the two types of adhesion seen in dental plaque?

A

homotypic - cell to cell adhesion ( within same cell species )
heterotypic - cell to cell adhesion (different cells)

35
Q

what are the two structures in heterotypic cell-to-cell adhesion?

A
  • corn cob complexes (strep sanguines on corynebacterium)

- test tube brush complexes (gram -ve bacilli on filamentous bacterium)

36
Q

Describe sub gingival plaque.

A

• Plaque formation – (supra/border)
• Inflammatory response
• Tissue swelling
• Deeper sulcus
– (more anaerobic)
• Inflammatory exudate – (rich in nutrients)
• More loosely structured microbiota develops