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Periodontal diseases and depression: A pre‐clinical in vivo study

María Martínez, David Martín‐Hernández, Leire Virto, Karina S. MacDowell, Eduardo Montero, Álvaro G. Bris, María José Marín, Nagore Ambrosio, David Herrera, Juan C. Leza, Mariano Sanz, Borja García‐Bueno, Elena Figuero

2021Journal Of Clinical Periodontology48 citationsDOI

Abstract

AIM: To analyse, through a pre-clinical in vivo model, the possible mechanisms linking depression and periodontitis at behavioural, microbiological and molecular levels. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Periodontitis (P) was induced in Wistar:Han rats (oral gavages with Porphyromonas gingivalis and Fusobacterium nucleatum) during 12 weeks, followed by a 3-week period of Chronic Mild Stress (CMS) induction. Four groups (n = 12 rats/group) were obtained: periodontitis and CMS (P+CMS+); periodontitis without CMS; CMS without periodontitis; and control. Periodontal clinical variables, alveolar bone levels (ABL), depressive-like behaviour, microbial counts and expression of inflammatory mediators in plasma and brain frontal cortex (FC), were measured. ANOVA tests were applied. RESULTS: The highest values for ABL occurred in the P+CMS+ group, which also presented the highest expression of pro-inflammatory mediators (TNF-α, IL-1β and NF-kB) in frontal cortex, related to the lipoprotein APOA1-mediated transport of bacterial lipopolysaccharide to the brain and the detection of F. nucleatum in the brain parenchyma. A dysregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal stress axis, reflected by the increase in plasma corticosterone and glucocorticoid receptor levels in FC, was also found in this group. CONCLUSIONS: Neuroinflammation induced by F. nucleatum (through a leaky mouth) might act as the linking mechanism between periodontal diseases and depression.

Topics & Concepts

Fusobacterium nucleatumPorphyromonas gingivalisPeriodontitisNeuroinflammationMedicineIn vivoDental alveolusInternal medicineCorticosteroneLipopolysaccharideEndocrinologyInflammationDentistryBiologyHormoneBiotechnologyTryptophan and brain disordersOral microbiology and periodontitis researchStress Responses and Cortisol
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