Bacto-Gum: Revolutionizing Oral Hygiene with Bacterial Technology

 
Divya Arcot, Isra Shabir, Megan Bumgarner
 
Spring 2011
 
TARTAR REMOVAL SYSTEM:
“Bacto-Gum”
 
Goal: 
To design a bacteria to remove tartar from
 
teeth to prevent oral diseases and assist in
 
oral hygiene.
 
Design:
1.
Insert a gene into a bacterial plasmid that causes
bacteria to consume tartar.
2.
Contain bacteria in a capsule with food to keep
them alive.
3.
Deliver to the consumer in chewing gum form.
 
 
IDEA 1 - Method
 
The removal of tartar will improve oral hygiene and
cleanliness which is key to overall health of the body
Some diseases have symptoms which affect the mouth
 
Will serve as a vital product in preventing tooth decay
and gum diseases (oral cancer, gingivitis, etc.)
 
The act of chewing causes secretion of saliva
 
 
 
IDEA 1 -  Importance
 
Over all improvement in oral hygiene
Supplement to brushing, flossing, using mouthwash, etc.
 
Reduce dental costs
Many do not have insurance which covers dental care
Inexpensive enough to be marketed to impoverished countries
 
Make oral hygiene products easily accessible
Is safe enough to be sold at retail stores
Does not require a prescription
 
Will allow for aesthetically pleasing teeth
 
 
IDEA 1 - Impact
 
Currently, the only way to remove tartar is to go to a
dentist and have them use professional tools.
 
Scaling/Root Planing (using a pointed instrument to remove
encrusted material from the root surfaces of the teeth)
Debridement (removal of plaque and tartar using an ultrasonic
device)
Surgery
 
 
IDEA 1 - Competition
 
IDEA 1 – Known & Unknown
 
Known
 
Some types of bacteria reside
in the mouth
 
Certain levels of acidity are
bad for the bacteria
 
Tartar and plaque are created
by both food and bacterial by
products
 
Unknown
 
Reaction of the general public
to bacterial cleaning methods.
 
Whether bacteria will
consume anything else in the
mouth
 
How bacterial will react to
salivary enzymes
 
http://www.deltadentalins.com/oral_health/dentalhe
alth.html
http://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/The_Importance_of_De
ntal_Care_and_Oral_Hygiene
http://www.dentalfind.com/info/tartar
 
 
Idea 1 - References
 
To genetically engineer  rice into a
special ‘super-rice’ rich in amino acids
 
Importance
 
Rice is an important staple in third world countries
 
Rich in protein, 
AND
 relatively cheap compared to
other options; poor people benefit
 
Good alternative for people like vegetarians
 
Eliminates a percentage of meat associated cardiac
health risks
 
 
 
Impact
 
Hunger and malnutrition are common to people in
third world countries
 
Successful project = improved standard of living for
such people
 
Another healthy option for Vegans and Vegetarians.
 
If tasty enough, could become a popular choice
 
Competition
 
Genetic engineering is common in today’s world- lots
of projects around
 
 
Golden Rice – Vitamin A producing rice
 
 
Soy- good but not so popular in third world
 
 
‘Knowns Vs Unknowns’
 
Knowns/Facts/Approach:
 
Rice contains at max 10% protein only
 
Lacks lysine, threonine, cysteine, and histidine for
starters.
 
Approach: use of engineered Recombinant DNA to
produce these and more amino acids in rice
 
‘Knowns vs Unknowns’
 
Unknowns & Difficulties:
 
Genetic modification could disrupt genes having to do with
reproduction- can only be verified if tested and grown
 
Super-rice taste
 
State approval for genetically modified food
 
Environmental opposition
 
Skepticism from target population
 
Costs
 
 
 
 
 
Environmental Opposition
 
Removing toxins in clay to benefit the health of people
practicing geophagy using a method of bacterial
filtration.
 
Methods
 
 
Settling tank
 
Filtration
 
Importance
 
Clay contains many minerals
Reducing the risks of consuming clay
Protecting health: reducing toxins
Increased stores of clay able to feed people
 
Impact
 
Pregnant women consuming clay in rituals.
People who eat clay for potential health benefits.
Third world countries who cannot afford most food
options.
 
Competition
 
similar technologies but not really a direct competition
bacteria removing toxins from water
 
 
Known/Unknown
 
Known:
Clay is mineral rich
Lead, arsenic, and chalk have negative effects on the
human body
 
Unknown:
Costs? (clean price vs. current price)
Specific type of bacteria (engineered or already existing?)
Bacterial waste products/waste removal?
Able to remove enough toxins to make it safe?
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Designing a revolutionary tartar removal system, Bacto-Gum aims to enhance oral hygiene by using genetically modified bacteria in a convenient chewing gum form. This innovative approach could potentially prevent oral diseases, improve overall health, reduce dental costs, and make oral hygiene products more accessible globally. The system addresses known and unknown factors related to bacterial cleaning methods and aims to compete with traditional dental procedures like scaling, root planing, debridement, and surgery.

  • Oral hygiene
  • Bacto-Gum
  • Tartar removal
  • Dental innovation
  • Bacterial technology

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  1. Divya Arcot, Isra Shabir, Megan Bumgarner Spring 2011

  2. TARTAR REMOVAL SYSTEM: Bacto-Gum

  3. IDEA 1 - Method Goal: To design a bacteria to remove tartar from teeth to prevent oral diseases and assist in oral hygiene. Design: Insert a gene into a bacterial plasmid that causes bacteria to consume tartar. 2. Contain bacteria in a capsule with food to keep them alive. 3. Deliver to the consumer in chewing gum form. 1.

  4. IDEA 1 - Importance The removal of tartar will improve oral hygiene and cleanliness which is key to overall health of the body Some diseases have symptoms which affect the mouth Will serve as a vital product in preventing tooth decay and gum diseases (oral cancer, gingivitis, etc.) The act of chewing causes secretion of saliva

  5. IDEA 1 - Impact Over all improvement in oral hygiene Supplement to brushing, flossing, using mouthwash, etc. Reduce dental costs Many do not have insurance which covers dental care Inexpensive enough to be marketed to impoverished countries Make oral hygiene products easily accessible Is safe enough to be sold at retail stores Does not require a prescription Will allow for aesthetically pleasing teeth

  6. IDEA 1 - Competition Currently, the only way to remove tartar is to go to a dentist and have them use professional tools. Scaling/Root Planing (using a pointed instrument to remove encrusted material from the root surfaces of the teeth) Debridement (removal of plaque and tartar using an ultrasonic device) Surgery

  7. IDEA 1 Known & Unknown Known Unknown Some types of bacteria reside in the mouth Reaction of the general public to bacterial cleaning methods. Certain levels of acidity are bad for the bacteria Whether bacteria will consume anything else in the mouth Tartar and plaque are created by both food and bacterial by products How bacterial will react to salivary enzymes

  8. Idea 1 - References http://www.deltadentalins.com/oral_health/dentalhe alth.html http://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/The_Importance_of_De ntal_Care_and_Oral_Hygiene http://www.dentalfind.com/info/tartar

  9. To genetically engineer rice into a special super-rice rich in amino acids

  10. Importance Rice is an important staple in third world countries Rich in protein, AND relatively cheap compared to other options; poor people benefit Good alternative for people like vegetarians Eliminates a percentage of meat associated cardiac health risks

  11. Impact Hunger and malnutrition are common to people in third world countries Successful project = improved standard of living for such people Another healthy option for Vegans and Vegetarians. If tasty enough, could become a popular choice

  12. Competition Genetic engineering is common in today s world- lots of projects around Golden Rice Vitamin A producing rice Soy- good but not so popular in third world

  13. Knowns Vs Unknowns Knowns/Facts/Approach: Rice contains at max 10% protein only Lacks lysine, threonine, cysteine, and histidine for starters. Approach: use of engineered Recombinant DNA to produce these and more amino acids in rice

  14. Knowns vs Unknowns Unknowns & Difficulties: Genetic modification could disrupt genes having to do with reproduction- can only be verified if tested and grown Super-rice taste State approval for genetically modified food Environmental opposition Skepticism from target population Costs

  15. Environmental Opposition

  16. Removing toxins in clay to benefit the health of people practicing geophagy using a method of bacterial filtration.

  17. Methods Settling tank Filtration

  18. Importance Clay contains many minerals Reducing the risks of consuming clay Protecting health: reducing toxins Increased stores of clay able to feed people

  19. Impact Pregnant women consuming clay in rituals. People who eat clay for potential health benefits. Third world countries who cannot afford most food options.

  20. Competition similar technologies but not really a direct competition bacteria removing toxins from water

  21. Known/Unknown Known: Clay is mineral rich Lead, arsenic, and chalk have negative effects on the human body Unknown: Costs? (clean price vs. current price) Specific type of bacteria (engineered or already existing?) Bacterial waste products/waste removal? Able to remove enough toxins to make it safe?

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