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AuthorCai, Wenji
AuthorDubreuil, Nadia
AuthorAbu Nada, Lina
AuthorZhou, Wen Bo Sam
AuthorBasiri, Tayebeh
AuthorHadad, Amir
AuthorCharde, Priti
AuthorDucret, Maxime
AuthorTamimi, Faleh
Available date2025-04-20T10:09:23Z
Publication Date2025-02-14
Publication NameJournal of Clinical Periodontology
Identifierhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jcpe.14142
CitationCai, W., Dubreuil, N., Abu Nada, L., Zhou, W. B. S., Basiri, T., Hadad, A., ... & Tamimi, F. (2025). Dental Calculus Formation Rate: The Role of Salivary Proteome and Metaproteome. Journal of Clinical Periodontology.
ISSN0303-6979
URIhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85218844371&origin=inward
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/64330
AbstractBackground: Dental calculus accumulation varies across individuals. While various factors contribute to its accumulation, the role of salivary composition remains underexplored. This study aims to compare individuals suffering from rapid rates of dental calculus formation rates with those having slow formation rates in terms of salivary electrochemical properties as well as its proteomic, metaproteomic and elemental composition. Methods: A total of 26 patients with a history of dental calculus were recruited. Saliva samples were collected and evaluated for electrochemical properties as well as elemental, proteomic and metaproteomic composition. Patients were provided scaling treatment to remove all calculus. Six months after the dental cleaning patients were re-assessed for the presence of dental calculus. Based on the dental calculus formation rate participants were categorised into slow (57.7%) and rapid calculus formers (42.3%) that were then assessed for differences in salivary composition. Results: Rapid calculus formers exhibited a more neutral zeta-potential and lower concentration of salivary calcium ions than their slow-forming counterparts. Proteomic analysis identified 895 proteins across all samples. Of these, 38 proteins were exclusive to the rapid formation group, while 24 proteins were specific to the slow group. The rapid group demonstrated augmented pathways related to cell binding (e.g., cytoskeletal regulation by Rho GTPase and integrin signalling), inflammatory mediation (e.g., chemokine and cytokine signalling) and neurodegenerative disorders (e.g., 5-Hydroxytryptamine degradation, Huntington's disease and Parkinson's disease) and significant enrichment in peptidase inhibitor activity. In contrast, the slow group demonstrated enrichment mainly in immune response. Metaproteomic analysis for salivary bacteria showed significant predominance of Streptococci in the rapid group and elevated levels of Rothia in the slow group. Conclusion: The saliva of patients with rapid calculus formation rates differs from that of patients with slow rates of calculus formation in terms of electrochemical properties as well as proteomic, metaproteomic and elemental composition.
SponsorThis work was supported by Mitacs, Visionaturolab Inc and MEDTEQ+. It was also funded and supported by the following agencies : MEDTEQ, MITACS and Visionaturolab Inc.
Languageen
PublisherJohn Wiley & Sons
Subjectdental calculus
human saliva
metaproteome
proteomics
salivary proteome
zeta potential
TitleDental Calculus Formation Rate: The Role of Salivary Proteome and Metaproteome
TypeArticle
Issue Number4
Volume Number52
ESSN1600-051X
dc.accessType Open Access


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