Center for Craniofacial Regeneration, School of Dental Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15261.
Department of Periodontics and Preventive Dentistry, School of Dental Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15261.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 Sep 3;121(36):e2400528121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2400528121. Epub 2024 Aug 26.
Many chronic inflammatory diseases are attributed to disturbances in host-microbe interactions, which drive immune-mediated tissue damage. Depending on the anatomic setting, a chronic inflammatory disease can exert unique local and systemic influences, which provide an exceptional opportunity for understanding disease mechanism and testing therapeutic interventions. The oral cavity is an easily accessible environment that allows for protective interventions aiming at modulating the immune response to control disease processes driven by a breakdown of host-microbe homeostasis. Periodontal disease (PD) is a prevalent condition in which quantitative and qualitative changes of the oral microbiota (dysbiosis) trigger nonresolving chronic inflammation, progressive bone loss, and ultimately tooth loss. Here, we demonstrate the therapeutic benefit of local sustained delivery of the myeloid-recruiting chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 2 (CCL2) in murine ligature-induced PD using clinically relevant models as a preventive, interventional, or reparative therapy. Local delivery of CCL2 into the periodontium inhibited bone loss and accelerated bone gain that could be ascribed to reduced osteoclasts numbers. CCL2 treatment up-regulated M2-macrophage and downregulated proinflammatory and pro-osteoclastic markers. Furthermore, single-cell ribonucleic acid (RNA) sequencing indicated that CCL2 therapy reversed disease-associated transcriptomic profiles of murine gingival macrophages via inhibiting the triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells-1 (TREM-1) signaling in classically activated macrophages and inducing protein kinase A (PKA) signaling in infiltrating macrophages. Finally, 16S ribosomal ribonucleic acid (rRNA) sequencing showed mitigation of microbial dysbiosis in the periodontium that correlated with a reduction in microbial load in CCL2-treated mice. This study reveals a novel protective effect of CCL2 local delivery in PD as a model for chronic inflammatory diseases caused by a disturbance in host-microbe homeostasis.
许多慢性炎症性疾病归因于宿主-微生物相互作用的紊乱,这导致了免疫介导的组织损伤。根据解剖位置的不同,慢性炎症性疾病会对局部和全身产生独特的影响,这为了解疾病机制和测试治疗干预提供了一个极好的机会。口腔是一个易于接近的环境,可以进行保护性干预,旨在调节免疫反应,以控制由宿主-微生物平衡失调驱动的疾病过程。牙周病(PD)是一种常见的疾病,其口腔微生物群(失调)的数量和质量的变化触发非解决性的慢性炎症、进行性的骨丢失,并最终导致牙齿脱落。在这里,我们展示了使用临床相关模型作为预防、干预或修复治疗,在鼠结扎诱导的 PD 中局部持续递送电髓细胞募集趋化因子(C-C 基序)配体 2(CCL2)的治疗益处。CCL2 递送到牙周组织中抑制了骨丢失并加速了骨获得,这可归因于破骨细胞数量的减少。CCL2 治疗上调了 M2 巨噬细胞,并下调了促炎和促破骨细胞标志物。此外,单细胞核糖核酸(RNA)测序表明,CCL2 治疗通过抑制经典激活的巨噬细胞中髓样细胞表达的触发受体-1(TREM-1)信号和诱导浸润巨噬细胞中的蛋白激酶 A(PKA)信号,逆转了疾病相关的鼠牙龈巨噬细胞转录组谱。最后,16S 核糖体核糖核酸(rRNA)测序显示,CCL2 治疗减轻了牙周病中微生物失调,这与 CCL2 治疗小鼠中微生物负荷的减少相关。这项研究揭示了 CCL2 局部递放在 PD 中的一种新型保护作用,作为由宿主-微生物平衡失调引起的慢性炎症性疾病的模型。