Nares Salvador, Moutsopoulos Niki M, Angelov Nikola, Rangel Zoila G, Munson Peter J, Sinha Neha, Wahl Sharon M
Oral Infection and Immunity Branch, National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892-4352, USA.
Am J Pathol. 2009 Apr;174(4):1400-14. doi: 10.2353/ajpath.2009.080677. Epub 2009 Mar 5.
Long-lived monocytes, macrophages, and dendritic cells (DCs) are Toll-like receptor-expressing, antigen-presenting cells derived from a common myeloid lineage that play key roles in innate and adaptive immune responses. Based on immunohistochemical and molecular analyses of inflamed tissues from patients with chronic destructive periodontal disease, these cells, found in the inflammatory infiltrate, may drive the progressive periodontal pathogenesis. To investigate early transcriptional signatures and subsequent proteomic responses to the periodontal pathogen, Porphyromonas gingivalis, donor-matched human blood monocytes, differentiated DCs, and macrophages were exposed to P. gingivalis lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and gene expression levels were measured by oligonucleotide microarrays. In addition to striking differences in constitutive transcriptional profiles between these myeloid populations, we identify a P. gingivalis LPS-inducible convergent, transcriptional core response of more than 400 annotated genes/ESTs among these populations, reflected by a shared, but quantitatively distinct, proteomic response. Nonetheless, clear differences emerged between the monocytes, DCs, and macrophages. The finding that long-lived myeloid inflammatory cells, particularly DCs, rapidly and aggressively respond to P. gingivalis LPS by generating chemokines, proteases, and cytokines capable of driving T-helper cell lineage polarization without evidence of corresponding immunosuppressive pathways highlights their prominent role in host defense and progressive tissue pathogenesis. The shared, unique, and/or complementary transcriptional and proteomic profiles may frame the context of the host response to P. gingivalis, contributing to the destructive nature of periodontal inflammation.
长寿单核细胞、巨噬细胞和树突状细胞(DCs)是表达Toll样受体的抗原呈递细胞,源自共同的髓系谱系,在先天性和适应性免疫反应中起关键作用。基于对慢性破坏性牙周病患者炎症组织的免疫组织化学和分子分析,在炎症浸润中发现的这些细胞可能推动牙周病的进行性发病机制。为了研究对牙周病原体牙龈卟啉单胞菌的早期转录特征以及随后的蛋白质组学反应,将供体匹配的人血单核细胞、分化的DCs和巨噬细胞暴露于牙龈卟啉单胞菌脂多糖(LPS),并通过寡核苷酸微阵列测量基因表达水平。除了这些髓系细胞群体在组成型转录谱上存在显著差异外,我们还确定了牙龈卟啉单胞菌LPS诱导的这些群体中400多个注释基因/ESTs的趋同转录核心反应,这反映在一个共同但数量上不同的蛋白质组学反应中。尽管如此,单核细胞、DCs和巨噬细胞之间还是出现了明显差异。长寿髓系炎症细胞,特别是DCs,通过产生能够驱动辅助性T细胞谱系极化的趋化因子、蛋白酶和细胞因子,对牙龈卟啉单胞菌LPS迅速而强烈地做出反应,且没有相应免疫抑制途径的证据,这一发现突出了它们在宿主防御和进行性组织发病机制中的重要作用。共享的、独特的和/或互补的转录和蛋白质组学谱可能勾勒出宿主对牙龈卟啉单胞菌反应的背景,促成牙周炎症的破坏性本质。