Kornman Kenneth S
Interleukin Genetics, 135 Beaver Street, Waltham, MA 02452, USA.
J Periodontol. 2008 Aug;79(8 Suppl):1560-8. doi: 10.1902/jop.2008.080213.
Chronic adult periodontitis is a bacterially induced chronic inflammatory disease that destroys the connective tissue and bone that support teeth. Concepts of the specific mechanisms involved in the disease have evolved with new technologies and knowledge. Histopathologic observations of diseased human tissues were used previously to speculate on the causes of periodontitis and to describe models of pathogenesis. Experimental evidence later emerged to implicate bacterial plaque deposits as the primary factor initiating periodontitis. At the same time, specific bacteria and immunoinflammatory mechanisms were differentially implicated in the disease. In the mid-1990s, early insights about complex diseases, such as periodontitis, led to new conceptual models of the pathogenesis of periodontitis. Those models included the bacterial activation of immunoinflammatory mechanisms, some of which targeted control of the bacterial challenge and others that had adverse effects on bone and connective tissue remodeling. Such models also acknowledged that different environmental and genetic factors modified the clinical phenotype of periodontal disease. However, the models did not capture the dynamic nature of the biochemical processes, i.e., that innate differences among individuals and changes in environmental factors may accelerate biochemical changes or dampen that shift. With emerging genomic, proteomic, and metabolomic data and systems biology tools for interpreting data, it is now possible to begin describing the basic elements of a new model of pathogenesis. Such a model incorporates gene, protein, and metabolite data into dynamic biologic networks that include disease-initiating and -resolving mechanisms. This type of model has a multilevel framework in which the biochemical networks that are regulated by innate and environmental factors can be described and the interrelatedness of networks can be captured. New models in the next few years will be merely frameworks for integrating key knowledge as it becomes available from the "-omics" technologies. However, it is possible to describe some of the key elements of the new models and discuss distinctions between the new and older models. It is hoped that improved conceptual models of pathogenesis will assist in focusing new research and speed the translation of new data into practical applications.
慢性成人牙周炎是一种由细菌引发的慢性炎症性疾病,会破坏支撑牙齿的结缔组织和骨骼。随着新技术和新知识的出现,人们对该疾病所涉及的具体机制的认识也在不断发展。以往,人们通过对患病人体组织进行组织病理学观察来推测牙周炎的病因并描述发病机制模型。后来出现的实验证据表明,菌斑沉积物是引发牙周炎的主要因素。与此同时,特定细菌和免疫炎症机制在该疾病中所起的作用也各有不同。20世纪90年代中期,对牙周炎等复杂疾病的初步认识催生了牙周炎发病机制的新概念模型。这些模型包括细菌对免疫炎症机制的激活,其中一些机制旨在控制细菌感染,而另一些则对骨骼和结缔组织重塑产生不利影响。此类模型还承认,不同的环境和遗传因素会改变牙周疾病的临床表型。然而,这些模型并未体现出生化过程的动态特性,即个体之间的固有差异以及环境因素的变化可能会加速生化变化或抑制这种转变。随着基因组学、蛋白质组学和代谢组学数据以及用于解释数据的系统生物学工具的出现,现在有可能开始描述一种新的发病机制模型的基本要素。这样的模型将基因、蛋白质和代谢物数据纳入动态生物网络,其中包括疾病的引发和解决机制。这种类型的模型具有多层次框架,在该框架中,可以描述由先天和环境因素调节的生化网络,并能够把握各网络之间的相互关联性。未来几年的新模型将仅仅是整合来自“组学”技术的关键知识的框架。然而,我们可以描述新模型的一些关键要素,并讨论新旧模型之间的区别。希望改进后的发病机制概念模型将有助于聚焦新的研究,并加快将新数据转化为实际应用的速度。