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Increased adhesion of peripheral blood neutrophils from patients with localized juvenile periodontitis
Authors:H. Hurttia  K. Saarinen  L. Leino
Abstract:Adhesion of peripheral blood neutrophils from 5 patients with localized juvenile periodontitis (LJP) and age- and gender-matched healthy controls was measured using a semi-automated 96-well microtiter plate assay method. Both unstimulated and formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (FMLP, 10-1000 nM)-stimulated neutrophils from LJP patients showed in general higher adhesion than did their controls. After 15-60 min incubation with 100 and 1000 nM FMLP the numbers of adherent cells were significantly (p<0.05), 2.1-2.6-fold higher in LJP patients than in controls. Neutrophils from these LJP patients showed also enhanced respiratory burst activity in response to unopsonized zymosan stimulation. To test whether a decrease in intracellular diacylglycerol (DAG) kinase activity could account for the increased neutrophil adhesion of LJP patients normal neutrophils were treated with R59949 (10 μm), a DAG-kinase inhibitor. Both unstimulated and FMLP-stimulated normal neutrophils showed significantly (p<0.05) enhanced adhesion after R59949-treatment. Taken together, our data indicate that neutrophils from the 5 LJP patients investigated here exhibit 2 parallel hyperactivities, namely increased adhesion and enhanced production of reactive oxygen species. Furthermore, our present and previous (Hurttia et al., J Periodont Res 1997; 32 : 401-407) results suggest that the observed neutrophil functional abnormalities in some LJP patients may be associated with decreased cellular DAG-kinase activity. It is proposed that the hyperadherent and -active neutrophils may promote the development of LJP by causing tissue damage in the periodontium.
Keywords:neutrophils  adhesion  diacylglycerol-kinase  localized juvenile periodontitis
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