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Altered Antigenic Profiling and Infectivity of Porphyromonas gingivalis in Smokers and Non‐Smokers With Periodontitis
Authors:Iris Zeller  Justin A. Hutcherson  Richard J. Lamont  Donald R. Demuth  Pinar Gumus  Nejat Nizam  Nurcan Buduneli  David A. Scott
Affiliation:1. Oral Health and Systemic Disease, University of Louisville, Louisville, KY.;2. Microbiology and Immunology, University of Louisville.;3. Department of Periodontology, School of Dentistry, Ege University, ?zmir, Turkey.
Abstract:Background: Cigarette smokers are more susceptible to periodontal diseases and are more likely to be infected with Porphyromonas gingivalis than non‐smokers. Furthermore, smoking is known to alter the expression of P. gingivalis surface components and compromise immunoglobulin (Ig)G generation. The aim of this study is to evaluate whether the overall IgG response to P. gingivalis is suppressed in smokers in vivo and whether previously established in vitro tobacco‐induced phenotypic P. gingivalis changes would be reflected in vivo. Methods: The authors examined the humoral response to several P. gingivalis strains as well as specific tobacco‐regulated outer membrane proteins (FimA and RagB) by enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay in biochemically validated (salivary cotinine) smokers and non‐smokers with chronic periodontitis (CP: n = 13) or aggressive periodontitis (AgP: n = 20). The local and systemic presence of P. gingivalis DNA was also monitored by polymerase chain reaction. Results: Smoking was associated with decreased total IgG responses against clinical (10512, 5607, and 10208C; all P <0.05) but not laboratory (ATCC 33277, W83) P. gingivalis strains. Smoking did not influence IgG produced against specific cell‐surface proteins, although a non‐significant pattern toward increased total FimA‐specific IgG in patients with CP, but not AgP, was observed. Seropositive smokers were more likely to be infected orally and systemically with P. gingivalis (P <0.001), as determined by 16S RNA analysis. Conclusion: Smoking alters the humoral response against P. gingivalis and may increase P. gingivalis infectivity, strengthening the evidence that mechanisms of periodontal disease progression in smokers may differ from those of non‐smokers with the same disease classification.
Keywords:Antigen‐antibody reactions  immunoglobulin  periodontitis  Porphyromonas gingivalis  smoking  vaccines
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