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mojo
02-18-2002, 03:31 PM
http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99991941

GM bacteria may banish tooth decay

A mouthful of genetically modified bacteria could keep tooth decay away for life. The scheme involves replacing your mouth's natural cavity-causing bacteria with GM bacteria specially designed to prevent tooth decay.

The GM bacteria would be swabbed onto to children's teeth at about age two, before they acquire the natural strain. The treatment could take just five minutes cost about $100.

"My goal was to construct a good version of bad bacteria," says dental researcher Jeffrey Hillman at the University of Florida in Gainesville.

The bad bug is called Streptococcus mutans and currently colonizes almost everyone's mouth. It causes about 85 per cent of all dental cavities by converting sugar to lactic acid, which slowly etches away the enamel on teeth.


Toxic killer


Hillman set out to find a sister strain to S. mutans that was incapable of secreting lactic acid and that also could kill and completely replace S. mutans. After collecting samples from the mouths of hundreds of patients in the early 1980s, he hit upon a strain that could annihilate S. mutans by secreting a toxin known as mutacin 1140. However, the strain still secreted lactic acid, so it still caused dental cavities.

To disarm the new strain of its ability to cause tooth decay, Hillman removed the gene that codes for lactase dehydrogenase, the enzyme that converts sugars to lactic acid. It took several years, but in the mid-1990s, he and his colleagues finally came up with a non-cavity causing strain they call BCS3-L1.

BCS3-L1 can be brushed or squirted onto the teeth in a formulation that Hillman says tastes like chicken soup. It dramatically reduced cavities in rats but Hillman, and his company OraGen Inc, have not yet received permission from the US Food and Drug Administration to test the therapy in humans.

However, three human subjects who volunteered to have BCS3-L1's parent strain applied to their teeth in the early 1980's still harbour only it and no S. mutans. The volunteers have not passed the strain to their wives and children, evidence that it cannot be spread by kissing.

Other researchers are working on a vaccine against cavity-causing bacteria. But Hillman believes it is much easier to tinker with bacteria than with the human immune system.

The new research was presented at the American Association for the Advancement of Science's 2002 annual meeting in Boston.


Catherine Zandonella, Boston

09:40 18 February 02

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i don't know how dentists are going to take this kind of news :eek:

cruelpupet
02-18-2002, 03:35 PM
cool

Markel
02-18-2002, 07:00 PM
If this stuff really works, you can imagine all the FUD that the dentists will be spouting against it. :hihi:

ThanatoGratus
02-18-2002, 07:00 PM
I'd assume that would also work for mouth odor... given its the same strainof bacteria?

chrissy
02-18-2002, 07:12 PM
And of course, it tastes like chicken.

Now, only if they can apply that to adults as well as 2 yr olds.

Cantacuzene
02-18-2002, 07:28 PM
YES!!!!

I've been looking for an alternative to healthy living for a while now. This is perfect.

joe52985
02-18-2002, 08:43 PM
Originally posted by DarkFury
The Cavity Creeps have finally met their match huh?

YO JOE! :hihi:

u rang? :heh:

brainsmile
02-18-2002, 10:08 PM
I wish I had this when I was young.

welfareloser
02-19-2002, 07:57 AM
Originally posted by mojo
i don't know how dentists are going to take this kind of news :eek:

the consensus is no problem...

dentists get more and more business for aesthetics every year. bleaching, straightening, etc. and it won't prevent all cavities... and teeth will still get worn out due to jaw misalignments...

and there are going to be about 40% fewer dentists in about five years when all the baby boomers retire, so there will still be too many customers for not enough dentists anyhoo...

mojo
02-19-2002, 11:47 AM
Originally posted by welfareloser


the consensus is no problem...

dentists get more and more business for aesthetics every year. bleaching, straightening, etc. and it won't prevent all cavities... and teeth will still get worn out due to jaw misalignments...

and there are going to be about 40% fewer dentists in about five years when all the baby boomers retire, so there will still be too many customers for not enough dentists anyhoo... ya, sure...sounds like those peeps that want you to think that "everything's fine" when deep down inside you know they're peeing their pants like the cast of the depends commercials

Thunder
02-19-2002, 12:35 PM
cool...

which reminds me...i need to go the dentist!!!

whitak24
02-19-2002, 12:48 PM
Originally posted by mojo
ya, sure...sounds like those peeps that want you to think that "everything's fine" when deep down inside you know they're peeing their pants like the cast of the depends commercials
lol
that was hilarious mojo :heh:

molecularfire
02-19-2002, 01:10 PM
However, three human subjects who volunteered to have BCS3-L1's parent strain applied to their teeth in the early 1980's still harbour only it and no S. mutans. The volunteers have not passed the strain to their wives and children, evidence that it cannot be spread by kissing.

Darn business people, making it so they can't be spread by kissing. Now that would make the $100.00 investment worthwhile. :D