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Sucrolytic enzymes from human dental plaque in saliva
Authors:ASMUND AKSNES
Affiliation:Department of Physiology Faculty of Medicine University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway
Abstract:abstract – The total effect of sucrose-splitting activity from three sucrose metabolizing enzymes has been investigated in "resting" saliva in contact with dental plaque material in 356 military recruits. Invertase effect is defined as the splitting of sucrose into equimolar quantities of glucose and fructose, dextransucrase as a glucosyl-transferase producing glucan and free fructose, and levansucrase as a fructosyl-transferase producing fructan and free glucose. Total monohexose and glucose production as well were determined quantitatively in each subject. Monohexose production was related to specific oral conditions, and a difference in tooth decay significant at a 5% level was found between samples with high and low enzyme content. The production of free glucose was lower than that of free fructose, significant at less than a 1 % level. This may indicate that more glucose is bound to form dextran than fructose to form levan in this salivary enzyme system. In the saliva samples with a high level of enzyme content a slight increase in relative effect of dextransucrase was found. This was not statistically significant.
Keywords:dental plaque    enzymes    saliva
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