1. Interleukin Gene Variability and Periodontal Bacteria in Patients with Generalized Aggressive Form of Periodontitis.
- Author
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Borilova Linhartova P, Danek Z, Deissova T, Hromcik F, Lipovy B, Szaraz D, Janos J, Fassmann A, Bartova J, Drizhal I, and Izakovicova Holla L
- Subjects
- Adult, Aggressive Periodontitis immunology, Aggressive Periodontitis microbiology, Alleles, Bacteria genetics, Case-Control Studies, Czech Republic epidemiology, Female, Gene Frequency genetics, Genetic Predisposition to Disease genetics, Genotype, Haplotypes genetics, Humans, Interleukin-1 genetics, Interleukin-10 genetics, Interleukin-17 genetics, Interleukin-18 genetics, Interleukin-6 genetics, Interleukins metabolism, Male, Periodontitis immunology, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide genetics, Aggressive Periodontitis genetics, Interleukins genetics, Periodontitis genetics
- Abstract
Host genetic predispositions to dysregulated immune response can influence the development of the aggressive form of periodontitis (AgP) through susceptibility to oral dysbiosis and subsequent host-microbe interaction. This case-control study aimed to perform a multilocus analysis of functional variants in selected interleukin ( IL ) genes in patients with the generalized form of AgP in a homogenous population. Twelve polymorphisms in IL-1 gene cluster, IL-6 and its receptor, IL-10 , IL-17A , and IL-18 were determined in 91 AgP patients and 210 controls. Analysis of seven selected periodontal bacteria in subgingival sulci/pockets was performed with a commercial DNA-microarray kit in a subgroup of 76 individuals. The pilot in vitro study included stimulation of peripheral blood monocytes (PBMC) from 20 individuals with periodontal bacteria and measurement of IL-10 levels using the Luminex method. Only the unctional polymorphism IL‑10 -1087 A/G (rs1800896) and specific IL-10 haplotypes were associated with the development of the disease ( P < 0.05, P
corr > 0.05). Four bacterial species occurred more frequently in AgP than in controls ( P < 0.01, Pcorr < 0.05). Elevated IL-10 levels were found in AgP patients, carriers of IL‑10 -1087GG genotype, and PBMCs stimulated by periodontal bacteria ( P < 0.05, Pcorr > 0.05). We therefore conclude that a combination of genetic predisposition to the altered expression of IL-10 and the presence of specific periodontal bacteria may contribute to Th1/Th2 balance disruption and AgP development.- Published
- 2020
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