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Anne Marie Lynge Pedersen 1 Article
Microbial signatures in oral sites of patients with primary Sjögren’s syndrome: Association with salivary gland hypofunction
Sarah Kamounah, Arjun Sarathi, Christiane Elisabeth Sørensen, Manimozhiyan Arumugam, Anne Marie Lynge Pedersen
Received January 27, 2025  Accepted May 2, 2025  Published online May 30, 2025  
DOI: https://doi.org/10.71150/jm.2501030
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AbstractAbstract

This study aimed to determine if the microbiota in four different oral sites and the oral health status differ between patients with primary Sjögren’s syndrome (pSS), non-pSS sicca symptoms, and healthy controls.

All participants underwent an interview and clinical oral examination. Stimulated whole saliva (SWS), supragingival plaque (SGP), buccal mucosa tissue (BLM), and tongue scrape (TGS) samples from 23 pSS patients, 36 patients with sicca symptoms, not fulfilling the classification criteria for pSS (non-pSS sicca), and 21 age-matched healthy controls (HC) were analyzed using V3–V4 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing, and determination of amplicon sequence variants (ASVs).

PSS and non-pSS sicca patients did not differ with respect to oral health status, saliva flow rates, abundance of predominant genera, relative abundance on genus level or bacterial diversity in any of the oral sites. Both patient groups differed significantly from the healthy control group in the abundance of 61 ASVs across all sites. The alpha-diversity was lower in SGP from non-pSS sicca patients (p = 0.019), and in TGS from pSS patients (p = 0.04). The proportion of variation in the beta-diversity across all four sites could be explained by the diagnosis (pSS, non-pSS sicca, and HC). However, subgrouping of patients according to their stimulated salivary flow rates (SWS > 0.7 ml/min versus SWS ≤ 0.7 ml/min), revealed significantly different abundance of three ASVs in SWS, 11 in SGP, and six in TGS. Our findings suggest that hyposalivation rather than pSS itself modifies the microbial composition in oral site-specific patterns leading to oral diseases.


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