Section of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA 02118, USA.
J Immunol. 2013 Feb 1;190(3):1148-57. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.1202511. Epub 2012 Dec 21.
Porphyromonas gingivalis is a primary etiological agent of chronic periodontal disease, an infection-driven chronic inflammatory disease that leads to the resorption of tooth-supporting alveolar bone. We previously reported that TLR2 is required for P. gingivalis-induced alveolar bone loss in vivo, and our in vitro work implicated TNF as a key downstream mediator. In this study, we show that TNF-deficient (Tnf(-/-)) mice are resistant to alveolar bone loss following oral infection with P. gingivalis, and thus establish a central role for TNF in experimental periodontal disease. Using bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMDM) from wild-type and gene-specific knockout mice, we demonstrate that the initial inflammatory response to P. gingivalis in naive macrophages is MyD88 dependent and requires cooperative signaling of TLR2 and TLR4. The ability of P. gingivalis to activate cells via TLR2 or TLR4 was confirmed in TLR2- or TLR4-transformed human embryonic kidney cells. Additional studies using bacterial mutants demonstrated a role for fimbriae in the modulation of TLR-mediated activation of NF-κB. Whereas both TLR2 and TLR4 contributed to TNF production in naive macrophages, P. gingivalis preferentially exploited TLR2 in endotoxin-tolerant BMDM to trigger excessive TNF production. We found that TNF induced surface TLR2 expression and augmented TLR-induced cytokine production in P. gingivalis-stimulated BMDM, establishing a previously unidentified TNF-dependent feedback loop. Adoptive transfer of TLR2-expressing macrophages to TLR2-deficient mice restored the ability of P. gingivalis to induce alveolar bone loss in vivo. Collectively, our results identify a TLR2- and TNF-dependent macrophage-specific mechanism underlying pathogen-induced inflammatory bone loss in vivo.
牙龈卟啉单胞菌是慢性牙周病的主要病因,是一种感染驱动的慢性炎症性疾病,导致支持牙齿的牙槽骨吸收。我们之前报道过 TLR2 是 P. gingivalis 诱导体内牙槽骨丢失所必需的,我们的体外研究表明 TNF 是关键的下游介质。在这项研究中,我们表明 TNF 缺陷(Tnf(-/-))小鼠对口腔感染 P. gingivalis 后的牙槽骨丢失具有抗性,从而确立了 TNF 在实验性牙周病中的核心作用。使用来自野生型和基因特异性敲除小鼠的骨髓来源的巨噬细胞(BMDM),我们证明了原始巨噬细胞对 P. gingivalis 的初始炎症反应依赖于 MyD88,并需要 TLR2 和 TLR4 的协同信号转导。TLR2 或 TLR4 转化的人胚肾细胞证实了 P. gingivalis 通过 TLR2 或 TLR4 激活细胞的能力。使用细菌突变体的进一步研究表明,菌毛在调节 TLR 介导的 NF-κB 激活中起作用。虽然 TLR2 和 TLR4 都有助于原始巨噬细胞中 TNF 的产生,但 P. gingivalis 在内毒素耐受的 BMDM 中优先利用 TLR2 触发过度的 TNF 产生。我们发现 TNF 诱导了表面 TLR2 表达,并增强了 P. gingivalis 刺激的 BMDM 中 TLR 诱导的细胞因子产生,从而建立了一个以前未被识别的 TNF 依赖性反馈回路。将表达 TLR2 的巨噬细胞过继转移到 TLR2 缺陷型小鼠中,恢复了 P. gingivalis 在体内诱导牙槽骨丢失的能力。总之,我们的结果确定了一种 TLR2 和 TNF 依赖性巨噬细胞特异性机制,该机制是体内病原体诱导的炎症性骨丢失的基础。