Department of Orofacial Sciences, School of Dentistry, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Department of Periodontology, Guanghua School of Stomatology, Hospital of Stomatology, Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou, China.
NPJ Biofilms Microbiomes. 2020 Mar 10;6(1):10. doi: 10.1038/s41522-020-0120-7.
Periodontal disease is a microbially-mediated inflammatory disease of tooth-supporting tissues that leads to bone and tissue loss around teeth. Although bacterially-mediated mechanisms of alveolar bone destruction have been widely studied, the effects of a polymicrobial infection on the periodontal ligament and microbiome/virome have not been well explored. Therefore, the current investigation introduced a new mouse model of periodontal disease to examine the effects of a polymicrobial infection on periodontal ligament (PDL) properties, changes in bone loss, the host immune response, and the microbiome/virome using shotgun sequencing. Periodontal pathogens, namely Porphyromonas gingivalis, Treponema denticola, Tannerella forsythia, and Fusobacterium nucleatum were used as the polymicrobial oral inoculum in BALB/cByJ mice. The polymicrobial infection triggered significant alveolar bone loss, a heightened antibody response, an elevated cytokine immune response, a significant shift in viral diversity and virome composition, and a widening of the PDL space; the latter two findings have not been previously reported in periodontal disease models. Changes in the PDL space were present at sites far away from the site of insult, indicating that the polymicrobial radius of effect extends beyond the bone loss areas and site of initial infection and wider than previously appreciated. Associations were found between bone loss, specific viral and bacterial species, immune genes, and PDL space changes. These findings may have significant implications for the pathogenesis of periodontal disease and biomechanical properties of the periodontium. This new polymicrobial mouse model of periodontal disease in a common mouse strain is useful for evaluating the features of periodontal disease.
牙周病是一种由牙齿支持组织的微生物介导的炎症性疾病,导致牙齿周围的骨和组织丧失。虽然细菌介导的牙槽骨破坏机制已被广泛研究,但多微生物感染对牙周韧带和微生物组/病毒组的影响尚未得到很好的探索。因此,目前的研究引入了一种新的牙周病小鼠模型,以使用高通量测序来检查多微生物感染对牙周韧带(PDL)特性、骨丢失变化、宿主免疫反应和微生物组/病毒组的影响。牙周病病原体,即牙龈卟啉单胞菌、伴放线放线杆菌、福赛斯坦纳菌和核梭杆菌,被用作 BALB/cByJ 小鼠的多微生物口腔接种物。多微生物感染引发了显著的牙槽骨丢失、抗体反应升高、细胞因子免疫反应升高、病毒多样性和病毒组组成的显著变化以及 PDL 空间变宽;后两种发现以前在牙周病模型中没有报道过。PDL 空间的变化出现在远离损伤部位的部位,表明多微生物的影响半径超出了骨丢失区域和初始感染部位,比以前认为的更宽。发现骨丢失、特定的病毒和细菌种类、免疫基因与 PDL 空间变化之间存在关联。这些发现可能对牙周病的发病机制和牙周组织的生物力学特性具有重要意义。这种新的牙周病多微生物小鼠模型在常见的小鼠品系中是评估牙周病特征的有用工具。
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