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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Saliva protein differences in dogs with and without dental calculus

By Bringel, Mayara et al.·Published in BMC veterinary research·2020·College of Dentistry, Canada·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Salivary proteomic profile of dogs with and without dental calculus.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A study looked at the saliva of 20 dogs to see how it differs between those with and without dental calculus (tartar buildup). They found that 12 dogs had dental calculus, and their saliva contained different proteins compared to the 8 dogs without it. Some of these proteins might be linked to oral health issues like chronic periodontitis. The researchers suggest that these proteins could be useful in future tests to help identify dental problems in dogs.

People also search for: dog dental calculus symptoms · dog saliva protein study · chronic periodontitis in dogs · how to prevent tartar buildup in dogs

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Dogs' saliva is a complex mixture of inorganic and organic constituents, rich in proteins. Therefore, knowing the saliva composition of these animals is extremely important to identify the presence of proteins that may be involved in physiological and pathological mechanisms of their oral cavity. The present study aimed to characterize the proteomic profile of saliva from dogs with and without dental calculus. RESULTS: Saliva samples were collected from 20 dogs. Before the collection, a visual clinical examination was performed and 8 subjects (40%) did not present any signs of dental calculus, while 12 (60%) presented dental calculus. After saliva collection, the samples were submitted to protein quantification (mBCA), and then they were prepared for analysis by nLC-ESI-MS/MS. A total of 658 unique proteins were identified, of which 225 were specific to dogs without dental calculus, 300 were specific to dogs with dental calculus, and 133 were common to all subjects. These proteins presented functions including transportation, immune response, structural, enzymatic regulation, signal transduction, transcription, metabolism, and some proteins perform functions as yet unknown. Several salivary proteins in dogs with dental calculus differed from those found in the group without dental calculus. Among the abundant proteins detected in periodontal affected cases, can be highlighting calcium-sensing receptor and transforming growth factor beta. Enrichment analysis reveled the presence of Rho GTPases signaling pathway. CONCLUSIONS: This research identified salivary proteins, that should be further investigated as potencial biomarkers of chronic periodontits with dental calculus formation in dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32814559/