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Bacteria fight fluoride in toothpaste.
updated: Dec 23, 2011, 12:08 PM
By Yale News
Yale researchers have uncovered the molecular tricks used by bacteria to fight the effects of
fluoride, which is commonly used in toothpaste and mouthwash to combat tooth decay.
In the Dec. 22 online issue of the journal Science Express, the researchers report that
sections of RNA messages called riboswitches - which control the expression of genes - detect the build-up of fluoride
and activate the defenses of bacteria, including those that contribute to tooth decay.
"These riboswitches are detectors made specifically to see fluoride," said Ronald Breaker, the
Henry Ford II Professor and chair of the Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology and senior author
of the study.
Fluoride in over-the-counter and prescription toothpastes is widely credited with the large
reduction in dental cavities seen since these products were made available beginning in the 1950s. This effect is
largely caused by fluoride bonding to the enamel of our teeth, which hardens them against the acids produced by bacteria
in our mouths. However, it has been known for many decades that fluoride at high concentrations also is toxic to
bacteria, causing some researchers to propose that this antibacterial activity also may help prevent cavities.
The riboswitches work to counteract fluoride's effect on bacteria. "If fluoride builds up to
toxic levels in the cell, a fluoride riboswitch grabs the fluoride and then turns on genes that can overcome its
effects," said Breaker.
Since both fluoride and some RNA sensor molecules are negatively charged, they should not be
able to bind, he notes.
"We were stunned when we uncovered fluoride-sensing riboswitches" said Breaker. "Scientists
would argue that RNA is the worst molecule to use as a sensor for fluoride, and yet we have found more than 2000 of
these strange RNAs in many organisms."
By tracking fluoride riboswitches in numerous species, the research team concluded that these
RNAs are ancient - meaning many organisms have had to overcome toxic levels of fluoride throughout their history.
Organisms from at least two branches of the tree of life are using fluoride riboswitches, and the proteins used to
combat fluoride toxicity are present in many species from all three branches.
"Cells have had to contend with fluoride toxicity for billions of years, and so they have
evolved precise sensors and defense mechanisms to do battle with this ion," said Breaker, who is also an investigator
with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Now that these sensors and defense mechanisms are known, Breaker said, it may
be possible to manipulate these mechanisms and make fluoride even more toxic to bacteria. Fluoride riboswitches and
proteins common in bacteria are lacking in humans, and so these fluoride defense systems could be targeted by drugs. For
example, the Yale team discovered protein channels that flush fluoride out of cells. Blocking these channels with
another molecule would cause fluoride to accumulate in bacteria, making it more effective as a cavity fighter.
Fluoride is the 13th most common element in the earth's crust, and it is naturally present in
high concentrations throughout the United States and elsewhere. Its use in toothpaste and its addition to city water
supplies across the United States sparked a controversy 60 years ago, and the dispute continues to this day. In the
United Kingdom, and in other European Union countries, fluoride is used to a much lesser extent due to fierce public
opposition.
The new findings from Yale only reveal how microbes overcome fluoride toxicity. The means by
which humans contend with high fluoride levels remains unknown, Breaker notes. He adds that the use of fluoride has had
clear benefits for dental health and that these new findings do not indicate that fluoride is unsafe as currently used.
Other Yale authors of the paper include: Jenny L. Baker, Narasimhan Sudarsan, Zasha Weinberg
and Adam Roth.
The work was funded by the National Institutes of Health. Breaker is co-founder of a
biotechnology company that has licensed intellectual property on riboswitches from Yale.
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