| Literature DB >> 20170537 |
Abstract
Many epidemiological evidences have proven the association between smoking and periodontal disease. The causality can be further established by linking findings of traditional epidemiological studies with the developments in molecular techniques that occurred in the last decade. The present article reviews recent studies that address the effect of smoking on molecular and genetic factors in periodontal disease. Most findings support the fact that tobacco smoking modulates destruction of the periodontium through different pathways: microcirculatory and host immune systems, connective tissue, and bone metabolism. Although smokers experience an increased burden of inflammatory responses to microbial challenges compared to non-smokers, understanding the association between smoking and periodontal diseases involves substantial problems with respect to accuracy of measurements, and particularly, sampling of many subjects. It remains unclear whether genetic susceptibility to periodontal disease is influenced by exposure to smoking or the effect of smoking on periodontal disease is influenced by genetic susceptibility. Employment of molecular techniques may play a key role in further elucidation of mechanisms linking smoking and periodontal destruction, the direct relationship as environmental factors and indirect relationship through genetic factors.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20170537 PMCID: PMC2836317 DOI: 10.1186/1617-9625-8-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tob Induc Dis ISSN: 1617-9625 Impact factor: 2.600
Biomarkers employed in studies on smoking and periodontal disease
| Target of qualification | Biomarkers | Specimens |
|---|---|---|
| Host responses | ||
| Microcirculatory system | Microcirculatory functions and intercellular adhesion molecule | Gingival microvasculature |
| Host immune inflammatory response systems | Immune cells and immunoglobulins | Blood serum, saliva, gingival crevicular fluid, and gingival tissue |
| Connective tissue and bone metabolism | Cytokines, prostanoids, and matrix metalloproteinase | |
| Genetic factors | Genotypes associated with the immune system, inflammation, and tissue metabolism | Blood, buccal swabs, and saliva |
Pathophysiological changes associated with smoking
| Target of qualification | Biomarkers* | Articles |
|---|---|---|
| Microcirculatory system | Gingival blood flow (chronic effect ↓ and acute effect ↑, quit effect ↑) | 9-11 |
| Host immune inflammatory response systems | PMNs or neutrophil count ? (blood↑ and GCF↓) | 16, 17 |
| Connective tissue and bone metabolism | IL-1a/β and IL-1ra ↓ | 16, 25, 28-31 |
*↑: increase, ↓: decrease, ?: uncertain. **Lung macrophages
ICAM-1: intercellular adhesion molecule-1, GCF: gingival crevicular fluid, PMN: polymorphonuclear neutrophil, IgG: immunoglobulin G, IL: interleukin, TNF-α: tumor necrosis factor-α, MMP: matrix metalloproteinase, OPG: osteoprotegerin, RANKL: receptor activator of nuclear factor-κβ ligand
Target genotypes and study population in association with periodontal disease and smoking
| Genotypes | Subjects | Main findings | Articles |
|---|---|---|---|
| IL-1A -889, IL-1B +3954 (originally described as +3953) | 134 subjects, USA | The polymorphic IL-1 gene cluster was associated with severity of periodontitis only in non-smokers. | 59 |
| IL-1A -889, IL-1B +3954 (originally described as +3953) | 28 African-American and 7 Caucasian-American families (early onset periodontitis affected and unaffected subjects), USA | IL-1ß disequilibrium with EOP was found both in smokers and non-smokers. | 57 |
| IL-1A -889 | 46 patients and 12 controls, UK | The carriage of allele 2 was associated with an increase in IL-l α protein levels, especially in non-smokers, while heavy smokers showed reduced levels of IL-lα protein, regardless of genotype. | 28 |
| IL-1A -4845, IL-1B -3954 | 295 Caucasians, Australia | A relationship was observed between the IL-1-positive genotype and increased mean probing pocket depth in non-smokers more than 50 years of age. IL-1 genotype-positive smokers had an increase in the number of probing depths ≥3.5 mm. | 56 |
| IL-1A +4845, IL-B +3954 | 90 patients (non- or former smokers), USA | IL-1 genotype-positive non-smokers or former light smokers were at increased odds of having moderate-to-severe periodontal disease compared to IL-1 genotype-negative patients. The presence of both former moderate smoking history and IL-1-positive genotype showed a lower likelihood of developing the disease when compared to those with presence of only one of the risk factors. | 60 |
| IL-1A -889, IL-1B +3954, IL-1RN | 154 Caucasians, Germany | Severity of periodontitis was associated with the composite genotype of IL-1α/1β in smokers, while no differences were found in genotype-negative subjects, irrespective of their smoking status. | 62 |
| IL-1A -889, IL-1B +3954, IL-1B -511 | 1085 Caucasians, Germany | An increased risk of periodontal disease and tooth loss was observed for IL-1 genotype-positive smokers. | 61, 63, 64 |
| IL-1A -889 IL-1B +3954 | 330 patients and 101 controls, Chile | The association between positive genotype and periodontitis was independent of smoking status. | 58 |
| IL-6 -174 | 155 patients and 54 controls, Brazil | An association between the G-genotype and periodontal status was observed only in non-smokers. | 65 |
| IL-10 -1087 | 60 patients and 39 controls, Sweden | An association between the GG genotype and periodontal status was more conspicuous in non-smokers. | 66 |
| Vitamin D receptor -1056 Taq-I | 303 patients and 231 controls, UK | Vitamin D receptor Taq-I TT polymorphism was moderately associated with both the presence and progression of periodontitis in smokers. | 70 |
| FcγRIIIb | 164 subjects aged 70 years old, Japan | An association between smoking and periodontal disease progression in elderly people with FcγRIIIb-NA2 polymorphism. | 68 |
| FcγRIIa | 422 Caucasians, USA | FcγRIIa-H/H131 genotype may be associated with chronic periodontitis risk in smokers. | 69 |
| FcγRIIIa -158V/F, FcγRIIIb -NA1/NA2 | 1083 Caucasians, Germany | Smokers show a significantly increased attachment loss in the presence of FcγRIIIb-NA2 allele. The different genotypes show no differences in non-smokers. | 63 |
| IFNGR1 | 62 patients and 56 controls, Norway | In combination with smoking, IFNGR1 was significantly associated with periodontitis. | 67 |
| NAT2 -T341C, -G590A, G857A MPO G-463ª | 1083 Caucasians, Germany | Smokers with the high activity variant of NAT 2 and MPO are at an increased risk of periodontitis. | 63 |
IL: interleukin, FcγR: Fcγ receptor, IFNGR1: interferon gamma receptor 1, NAT: N-acetyltransferase, MPO: myeloperoxidase