Department of Biomedical Science, School of Dental Medicine, University of Nevada Las Vegas, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA.
Center for Oral Health Research, College of Dentistry, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, USA.
J Periodontal Res. 2021 Oct;56(5):863-876. doi: 10.1111/jre.12882. Epub 2021 Apr 7.
Local and systemic IgG antibodies or oral bacteria have been described with periodontitis. We extended these observations by assessing the impact of a range of intrinsic factors on serum IgG subclass antibodies to both commensal and pathogenic oral bacteria that would contribute to variations in immune protection or disease susceptibility in periodontitis have not been described.
Subjects (n = 278) were classified as healthy, gingivitis, or periodontitis and categorized as mild, moderate, and severe periodontitis. Demographic stratification included sex, age, race/ethnicity, smoking, and obesity. Whole formalin-fixed bacteria were used as antigens to detect serum immunoglobulin (Ig)G subclass antibody levels using an ELISA.
The greatest differences in variations in IgG subclasses occurred in periodontitis versus health or gingivitis to bacteria considered oral pathogens (eg, Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans, Porphyromonas gingivalis, and Treponema denticola) with IgG1, IgG2, and IgG4 increased by three- to sevenfold with Pg. Differences in subclass levels and distribution were also observed related to disease severity, particularly related to individual subclass responses to Pg. Examination of the overall population showed that females had elevated antibody, reflected by elevated IgG2 amounts/proportions. The older group of subjects demonstrated elevated antibody to multiple oral bacteria, lacking any particular subclass pattern. IgG2 antibody to Aa and Pg was increased in smokers. Multiple IgG subclass antibody levels to oral pathogens were significantly decreased in the obese subset within this population.
This investigation identified patterns of IgG subclass antibody responses to oral bacteria and demonstrated substantial effects of disease impacting the level and subclass distribution of antibody to an array of oral bacteria. Altered subclass antibody profiles most often in IgG2 levels and for antibody to P. gingivalis were found related to sex, age, disease severity, race/ethnicity, smoking, and obesity to both pathogens and commensal bacteria.
已有研究描述了牙周炎与局部和全身 IgG 抗体或口腔细菌有关。我们通过评估一系列内在因素对共生和病原性口腔细菌的血清 IgG 亚类抗体的影响,扩展了这些观察结果,这些因素可能会导致牙周炎的免疫保护或疾病易感性发生变化,但尚未得到描述。
受试者(n=278)分为健康、牙龈炎和牙周炎,并分为轻度、中度和重度牙周炎。人口统计学分层包括性别、年龄、种族/民族、吸烟和肥胖。使用福尔马林固定的全细菌作为抗原,通过 ELISA 检测血清免疫球蛋白(Ig)G 亚类抗体水平。
与健康或牙龈炎相比,牙周炎患者对被认为是口腔病原体的细菌(例如,伴放线放线杆菌、牙龈卟啉单胞菌和牙髓密螺旋体)的 IgG 亚类变异差异最大,Pg 使 IgG1、IgG2 和 IgG4 增加了三到七倍。与疾病严重程度相关的亚类水平和分布差异也观察到,特别是与个体对 Pg 的亚类反应有关。对整个人群的检查表明,女性的抗体水平升高,这反映在 IgG2 量/比例升高。年龄较大的受试者对多种口腔细菌的抗体升高,没有特定的亚类模式。吸烟者对 Aa 和 Pg 的 IgG2 抗体增加。在该人群中,肥胖亚组对多种口腔病原体的 IgG 亚类抗体水平显著降低。
本研究确定了对口腔细菌的 IgG 亚类抗体反应模式,并证明了疾病对一系列口腔细菌的抗体水平和亚类分布产生了重大影响。在该人群中,与性别、年龄、疾病严重程度、种族/民族、吸烟和肥胖相关的 IgG2 水平和对 P. gingivalis 的抗体改变的亚类抗体谱最常见。