Genetically
engineered bacteria fight tooth decaySaturday, July 27,
2002
Genetically engineered
organisms that attack decay-causing bacteria could represent a
significant component in the war against tooth decay,
according to a report in the Washington Post.
The
report details several approaches to eliminating or rendering
harmless the Streptococcus mutans bacteria that are
responsible for converting sugars in food into lactic acid,
the chemical that dissolves tooth enamel and causes decay.
Researchers from the Karolinska Institute's Center for
Oral Biology in Sweden have modified the Lactobacillus zeae
bacterium to carry an antibody against S. mutans that can
attach to the surface of S. mutans and render it harmless, the
report says. Initial results showed a 40 percent reduction in
early cavities for subjects given the bacterium.
At
the University of Florida College of Dentistry, scientists
have created a strain of S. mutans that lacks the gene
necessary to produce the decay-causing lactic acid. The strain
is activated by a synthetic nutrient not normally found in the
human diet to provide some assurance against unintended
consequences of introducing the modified bacteria into the
oral environment.
National Institute of Dental and
Craniofacial Research director Dr. Lawrence Tabak is quoted in
the Post story expressing concern that bacteria engineered to
kill S. mutans might leave open a niche into which worse
bacteria might move. Instead, he prefers the concept of
replacing harmful S. mutans with a species engineered to
rebuild tooth surfaces.
"Some microorganisms produce
acids, but others produce bases, and these bases provide a
milieu that favors remineralization," he said. "The processes
of tooth decay and remineralization are very dynamic
processes, and we now have a whole host of tools to look at
this in real time."
Another scientist from the
University of Florida is taking just such an approach, the
report says, with a strain of S. mutans engineered to increase
production of the enzyme urease, which converts urea into
ammonia to create conditions conducive to enamel production.
Initial tests show fewer cavities in laboratory animals whose
mouths were colonized with the modified bacteria, according to
the report. |