Sex-specific differences in salivary microbiota composition and their associations with metabolic health in adults with excess body weight: a secondary cross-sectional analysis
Jhenifer Pereira da Costa, Gabriela Macedo Fraiz, Dandara Baia Bonifácio, Fermín I. Milagro, Josefina Bressan

TL;DR
This study explores how the salivary microbiome differs between men and women with excess body weight and how these differences relate to metabolic health markers.
Contribution
The study identifies sex-specific microbial profiles in the salivary microbiota and their associations with metabolic markers in adults with excess body weight.
Findings
Men showed higher alpha diversity and specific microbial genera like Tannerella and Actinomyces.
Women had higher abundance of genera like Campylobacter and Granulicatella, with Granulicatella linked to triglycerides and the TyG index.
Sex-specific differences in salivary microbiota suggest potential links to metabolic health variations.
Abstract
Growing evidence links the oral microbiome to obesity-related outcomes, yet the influence of sex-related biological differences on salivary microbial profiles remains insufficiently explored. This exploratory study aimed to characterize the composition, abundance, and diversity of the salivary microbiota in Brazilian men and women with excess body weight and to examine its associations with cardiometabolic markers. This cross-sectional secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial (REBEC: RBR-9832wsx) included 59 adults with excess body weight. Salivary microbiota was profiled through amplification of the 16 S rRNA V4 region, and bioinformatics analyses were performed using the Microbiome Analyst (v2.0). Associations between microbial taxa and clinical variables were assessed using Spearman’s correlation. Men exhibited greater alpha diversity at the family level by higher…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOral microbiology and periodontitis research · Gut microbiota and health · Salivary Gland Disorders and Functions
