4.7 Article

Polymicrobial Aggregates in Human Saliva Build the Oral Biofilm

Journal

MBIO
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mbio.00131-22

Keywords

polymicrobial aggregate; saliva; oral biofilm; spatial structure; microbiome

Categories

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [BIO2015-68711-R]
  2. National Institute for Dental and Craniofacial Research [R01 DE025220]
  3. University of Amsterdam
  4. NWO Earth and Life Sciences (ALW) [834.13.006]
  5. Generalitat Valenciana [APOSTD/2019/009]

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Microbial aggregates with diverse structures and compositions, including bacteria associated with host cells, are found in human saliva. These aggregates rapidly proliferate and expand during colonization and biofilm initiation, while most single cells remain static or are incorporated by growing aggregates. This alternative biofilm development process involves aggregates adhering to surfaces as growth nuclei and shaping polymicrobial communities at different scales.
Biofilm community development has been established as a sequential process starting from the attachment of single cells on a surface. However, microorganisms are often found as aggregates in the environment and in biological fluids. Here, we conduct a comprehensive analysis of the native structure and composition of aggregated microbial assemblages in human saliva and investigate their spatiotemporal attachment and biofilm community development. Using multiscale imaging, cell sorting, and computational approaches combined with sequencing analysis, a diverse mixture of aggregates varying in size, structure, and microbial composition, including bacteria associated with host epithelial cells, can be found in saliva in addition to a few single-cell forms. Phylogenetic analysis reveals a mixture of complex consortia of aerobes and anaerobes in which bacteria traditionally considered early and late colonizers are found mixed together. When individually tracked during colonization and biofilm initiation, aggregates rapidly proliferate and expand tridimensionally, modulating population growth, spatial organization, and community scaffolding. In contrast, most single cells remain static or are incorporated by actively growing aggregates. These results suggest an alternative biofilm development process whereby aggregates containing different species or associated with human cells collectively adhere to the surface as growth nuclei to build the biofilm and shape polymicrobial communities at various spatial and taxonomic scales. IMPORTANCE Microbes in biological fluids can be found as aggregates. How these multicellular structures bind to surfaces and initiate the biofilm life cycle remains understudied. Here, we investigate the structural organization of microbial aggregates in human saliva and their role in biofilm formation. We found diverse mixtures of aggregates with different sizes, structures, and compositions in addition to free-living cells. When individually tracked during binding and growth on tooth-like surfaces, most aggregates developed into structured biofilm communities, whereas most single cells remained static or were engulfed by the growing aggregates. Our results reveal that preformed microbial consortia adhere as buds of growth, governing biofilm initiation without specific taxonomic order or cell-by-cell succession, which provide new insights into spatial and population heterogeneity development in complex ecosystems.

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