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Oral bacteria project gets cash injection

8th Jul 2011

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A team of researchers at King's College London and the Forsyth Institute have been awarded a large grant to compile the first comprehensive list of oral bacterial species.

The Human Oral Microbiome Database provides descriptions of each species together with tools for analysis of their DNA.

ANd the team scooped a grant made by the US National Institute for Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR) to continue their work.

Most bacteria living in the mouth are thought to be important for maintaining the health of teeth and gums, as well as for general human health.

A smaller number are potentially disease causing.

The database helps scientists studying the role of specific bacteria in human health and disease, and paves the way to constructing similar databases for other body sites such as the skin and the large intestine.

The NIDCR grant will enable the researchers to continue cataloguing the Human Oral Microbiome and describing the 1,000 different bacterial species found in the human mouth.

The information is available on the Human Oral Microbiome Database website (www.homd.org) and has been a valuable resource for the dental and medical research communities since 2008.

William Wade, professor of oral microbiology at King's College London, says: ‘The new work will focus on extending the database to include newly described oral bacteria, many of which are being discovered at King's and the Forsyth Institute and to develop new analysis tools which can handle the large amount of data generated by next generation DNA sequencing technologies which are increasingly being used to characterise microbiomes.'

Also, new methods developed at King's to cultivate bacteria that have not been grown in the laboratory before will be used to obtain cultures of these organisms to deposit in culture collections for the benefit of other researchers.

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DNA purified from these cultures will be submitted to the National Institutes of Health Human Microbiome Project for genome sequencing.          

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