Culture-independent nucleic acid technologies have been extensively applied to the analysis of oral bacterial communities associated with healthy and diseased conditions. These methods have confirmed and substantially expanded the findings from culture studies to reveal the oral microbial inhabitants and candidate pathogens associated with the major oral diseases. Over 1000 bacterial distinct species-level taxa have been identified in the oral cavity and studies using next-generation DNA sequencing approaches indicate that the breadth of bacterial diversity may be even much larger. Nucleic acid technologies have also been helpful in profiling bacterial communities and identifying disease-related patterns. This chapter provides an overview of the diversity and taxonomy of oral bacteria associated with health and disease.
CITATION STYLE
Siqueira, J. F., & Rôças, I. N. (2017). The oral microbiota in health and disease: An overview of molecular findings. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 1537, pp. 127–138). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-6685-1_7
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