Fusobacteria are common obligately anaerobic Gram-negative bacteria of the oral cavity that may act as a bridge between early and late colonizing bacteria in dental plaque and have a role in oral and extra-oral infections.
Fusobacterium nucleatum
has a crucial role in oral biofilm structure and ecology, as revealed in experimental and clinical biofilm models. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of various
Fusobacterium
species on
in vitro
biofilm formation and structure in three different oral biofilm models namely a supragingival, a supragingival “feeding”, and a subgingival biofilm model. The standard six-species supragingival and “feeding” biofilm models employed contained
Actinomyces oris
,
Candida albicans
,
Streptococcus mutans
,
Streptococcus oralis
,
Veillonella dispar
, and
Fusobacterium
sp. The subgingival biofilm model contained 10 species (
A. oris
,
Campylobacter rectus
,
F. nucleatum
ssp.
nucleatum
,
Porphyromonas gingivalis
,
Prevotella intermedia
,
Streptococcus anginosus
,
S. oralis
,
Tannerella forsythia
,
Treponema denticola
, and
V. dispar
). Six different
Fusobacterium
species or subspecies, respectively, were tested namely
F. nucleatum
ssp.
fusiforme
,
F. nucleatum
ssp.
nucleatum
,
F. nucleatum
ssp.
polymorphum
,
F. nucleatum
ssp.
vincentii
,
F. naviforme
, and
F. periodonticum
). Biofilms were grown anaerobically on hydroxyapatite disks in 24-well culture dishes. After 64 h, biofilms were either harvested and quantified by culture analysis or proceeded to fluorescent
in situ
hybridization (FISH) and confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM). All
Fusobacterium
species tested established well in the biofilms, with CFUs ranging from 1.4E+04 (
F. nucleatum
ssp.
fusiforme
) to 5.6E+06 (
F. nucleatum
ssp.
nucleatum
). The presence of specific
Fusobacterium
sp./ssp. induced a significant decrease in
C. albicans
levels in the supragingival model and in
V. dispar
levels in the “feeding” supragingival model. In the subgingival model, the counts of
A. oris
,
S. oralis
,
P. intermedia
,
P. gingivali...