Department of Oral Biology, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA.
Department of Medicine, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA.
J Dent Res. 2022 Mar;101(3):348-356. doi: 10.1177/00220345211040729. Epub 2021 Oct 12.
Although there is a clear relationship between the degree of obesity and periodontal disease incidence, the mechanisms that underpin the links between these conditions are not completely understood. Understanding that myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) are expanded during obesity and operate in a context-defined manner, we addressed the potential role of MDSCs to contribute toward obesity-associated periodontal disease. Flow cytometry revealed that in the spleen of mice fed a high-fat diet (HFD), expansion in monocytic MDSCs (M-MDSCs) significantly increased when compared with mice fed a low-fat diet (LFD). In the osteoclast differentiation assay, M-MDSCs isolated from the bone marrow of HFD-fed mice showed a larger number and area of osteoclasts with a greater number of nuclei. In the M-MDSCs of HFD-fed mice, several osteoclast-related genes were significantly elevated when compared with LFD-fed mice according to a focused transcriptomic platform. In experimental periodontitis, the number and percentage of M-MDSCs were greater, with a significantly larger increase in HFD-fed mice versus LFD-fed mice. In the spleen, the percentage of M-MDSCs was significantly higher in HFD-fed periodontitis-induced (PI) mice than in LFD-PI mice. Alveolar bone volume fraction was significantly reduced in experimental periodontitis and was further decreased in HFD-PI mice as compared with LFD-PI mice. The inflammation score was significantly higher in HFD-PI mice versus LFD-PI mice, with a concomitant increase in TRAP staining for osteoclast number and area in HFD-PI mice over LFD-PI mice. These data support the concept that M-MDSC expansion during obesity to become osteoclasts during periodontitis is related to increased alveolar bone destruction, providing a more detailed mechanistic appreciation of the interconnection between obesity and periodontitis.
尽管肥胖程度与牙周病发病率之间存在明显的关系,但支撑这些疾病之间关联的机制尚不完全清楚。了解到髓系来源的抑制细胞(MDSC)在肥胖时会扩张,并以特定的方式发挥作用,我们研究了 MDSC 对肥胖相关牙周病的潜在作用。流式细胞术显示,与低脂饮食(LFD)喂养的小鼠相比,高脂饮食(HFD)喂养的小鼠的脾脏中单核细胞 MDSC(M-MDSC)显著扩张。在破骨细胞分化测定中,从 HFD 喂养的小鼠骨髓中分离的 M-MDSC 显示出更多数量和更大面积的破骨细胞,并且具有更多的细胞核。根据聚焦的转录组学平台,与 LFD 喂养的小鼠相比,HFD 喂养的小鼠的 M-MDSC 中几种破骨细胞相关基因显著升高。在实验性牙周炎中,M-MDSC 的数量和百分比更高,与 LFD 喂养的小鼠相比,HFD 喂养的小鼠的 M-MDSC 数量显著增加。在脾脏中,HFD 喂养的牙周炎诱导(PI)小鼠的 M-MDSC 百分比明显高于 LFD-PI 小鼠。与 LFD-PI 小鼠相比,实验性牙周炎导致牙槽骨体积分数显著降低,HFD-PI 小鼠进一步降低。与 LFD-PI 小鼠相比,HFD-PI 小鼠的炎症评分显著升高,同时 HFD-PI 小鼠的 TRAP 染色显示破骨细胞数量和面积增加。这些数据支持这样的概念,即在牙周炎期间肥胖引起的 M-MDSC 扩张成为破骨细胞与牙槽骨破坏增加有关,为肥胖与牙周炎之间的相互联系提供了更详细的机制理解。