Summary of Study ST002265

This data is available at the NIH Common Fund's National Metabolomics Data Repository (NMDR) website, the Metabolomics Workbench, https://www.metabolomicsworkbench.org, where it has been assigned Project ID PR001447. The data can be accessed directly via it's Project DOI: 10.21228/M8PH7X This work is supported by NIH grant, U2C- DK119886.

See: https://www.metabolomicsworkbench.org/about/howtocite.php

This study contains a large results data set and is not available in the mwTab file. It is only available for download via FTP as data file(s) here.

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Study IDST002265
Study TitleMulti-omic analysis reveals bacteria may have a role in dental erosion
Study TypeResearch Study
Study SummaryNMR was performed on 11 saliva samples; 5 from participants classified as having dental erosion and 6 from healthy control participants with no dental erosion to assess the differences in metabolome between the two groups. NMR analysis alone revealed no significant differences between the dental erosion and healthy controls. However, bacterial mRNA sequencing of the oral microbiome from the same saliva samples was performed and the bacterial gene expression profiles was correlated to metabolite concentrations in the groups. The dental erosion group had strong correlations between metabolites associated with protein degradation and amino acid fermentation (formate, butyrate, propionate, 5-aminopentanoate, acetate, glycine, phenylalanine, dimethyl sulfone) and increased activity of species including 4 Prevotella species, Actinomyces graevenitzii, Tannerella species, and 2 Selenomas species, to name a few. Whereas in the healthy control group, the only positive correlations between metabolite concentrations and bacterial activity was for urea and 5-aminopentanoate; urea was positively correlated with Aggregatibacter actinomycetecomytans, Lysinibacillus fusiformis, and Veillonella tobetsuensis, and 5-aminopentanoate was positively correlated with 3 different Leptotrichia species, Streptococcus parasanguinis, and 2 Prevotella species.
Institute
King's College London
Last NameCleaver
First NameLeanne
AddressFloor 17, Tower Wing, Guy's Hospital, King's College London, Great Maze Pond
Emailleanne.cleaver@kcl.ac.uk
Phone07464626438
Submit Date2022-08-02
Num Groups2
Total Subjects11
Raw Data AvailableYes
Raw Data File Type(s)fid
Analysis Type DetailNMR
Release Date2022-09-05
Release Version1
Leanne Cleaver Leanne Cleaver
https://dx.doi.org/10.21228/M8PH7X
ftp://www.metabolomicsworkbench.org/Studies/ application/zip

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Factors:

Subject type: Human; Subject species: Homo sapiens (Factor headings shown in green)

mb_sample_id local_sample_id Sample Type
SA217469SE1 2Erosion 1
SA217470SE1 3Erosion 1
SA217471SE1 1Erosion 1
SA217472SE2 3Erosion 2
SA217473SE2 2Erosion 2
SA217474SE2 1Erosion 2
SA217475SE3 3Erosion 3
SA217476SE3 2Erosion 3
SA217477SE3 1Erosion 3
SA217478SE4 2Erosion 4
SA217479SE4 3Erosion 4
SA217480SE4 1Erosion 4
SA217481SE5 3Erosion 5
SA217482SE5 2Erosion 5
SA217483SE5 1Erosion 5
SA217484SH1 3Healthy 1
SA217485SH1 2Healthy 1
SA217486SH1 1Healthy 1
SA217487SH2 2Healthy 2
SA217488SH2 3Healthy 2
SA217489SH2 1Healthy 2
SA217490SH3 3Healthy 3
SA217491SH3 2Healthy 3
SA217492SH3 1Healthy 3
SA217493SH4 3Healthy 4
SA217494SH4 2Healthy 4
SA217495SH4 1Healthy 4
SA217496SH5 2Healthy 5
SA217497SH5 3Healthy 5
SA217498SH5 1Healthy 5
SA217499SH6 3Healthy 6
SA217500SH6 2Healthy 6
SA217501SH6 1Healthy 6
SA217502Sterile SalivaSterile Saliva
Showing results 1 to 34 of 34
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