| Literature DB >> 30036945 |
Arpita Basu1, Emily Masek2, Jeffrey L Ebersole3.
Abstract
Periodontitis, which is a chronic infection and disease of the periodontium, is a significant global health burden and is linked to other chronic health conditions such as diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Dietary polyphenols present in a wide variety of plant-based foods, herbs, and botanicals have been shown to exert antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, and reduced osteoclast and alveolar bone loss activities in animal models of periodontitis. Polyphenol-containing beverages and foods especially green tea and its active catechin epigallocatechin-3-gallate, cranberries, pomegranates, and fruit and vegetable extracts have reported bacteriostatic/bactericidal activity against microbial species such as P. gingivalis and shown total bacterial burden in clinical studies. These polyphenols also exhibit anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects, which have the potential to impact various biological mechanisms for reducing the initiation and progression of periodontitis. The main objective of this mini-review is to focus on the mechanisms of action of dietary polyphenols in improving the pathophysiology underlying chronic inflammatory diseases like periodontitis based on pre-clinical and clinical models.Entities:
Keywords: P. gingivalis; green tea; inflammation; periodontitis; polyphenols
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30036945 PMCID: PMC6099717 DOI: 10.3390/molecules23071786
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Polyphenols as antioxidant/anti-inflammatory/antimicrobial agents in periodontitis: experimental cellular models.
| Study Design and Model | Polyphenol | Significant Findings | Author, Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| HPLC culture stimulated with LPS of | Resveratrol (25, 50, and 100 µM) | Rizzo et al., 2012 [ | |
| 70% ethanolic blueberry extract of varying concentrations (500, 250, 125, 62.5, 31.25, 15.62, and 7.9 μg/mL) | Ben Lagha et al., 2015 [ | ||
| Human gingival epithelial cells grown in keratinocyte medium | EGCG (1 and 5 mg/mL) & AC-PCs (25 and 50 mg/mL) | Lombardo et al., 2015 [ | |
| RA1 (1–100 μg/mL) containing flavan-3-ols, flavonoids, and oligomeric proantho cyanidins | Schmuch et al., 2015 [ | ||
| Bacterial cultures of | Phenols and polyphenols from different classes including hydroxyl acids, flavanols, flavanones, anthocyanins, and phenolics (0.24–2500 μg/mL, depending on the compound) | Shahzad et al., 2015 [ | |
| Normal human fibroblasts incubated with HSA, G-HSA, or | Cranberry high molecular weight NDM (10–50 μg/mL with HSA or G-HSA alone; 50 or 100 μg/mL with HSA, G-HSA, and LPS) | Tipton et al., 2016 [ | |
| De Oliveira et al., 2017 [ | |||
| Green tea (20 mg), black tea (10 mg), and theaflavins (20 mg) in solution | Ben Lagha et al., 2017 [ |
AC-PC, A-type cranberry proanthocyanidins, EGCG, epigallocatechin gallate, G-HSA, glycated human serum albumin, HSA, human serum albumin, HPLC, human periodontal ligament cell, IL-6, interleukin-6; LPS, lipopolysaccharide, MMP-3, matrix metalloproteinase-3, NDM, non-dialyzable material, NO, nitric oxide; RA1, Rumex acetosa (common sorrel) extract. Symbol: downward arrow, decrease.
Polyphenols as antioxidant/anti-inflammatory/antimicrobial agents in periodontitis: experimental animal models.
| Study Design and Model | Polyphenol | Significant Findings | Author, Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats | Paterniti et al., 2010 [ | ||
| Sunphenon BG blend (91.3% polyphenols) administered topically to affected periodontal areas | Yoshinaga et al., 2014 [ | ||
| EGCG (0.02%) or vehicle (distilled water) in drinking water | Cai et al., 2015 [ | ||
| Ligation-induced periodontitis in Wistar rats | Hawthorn ( | Hatipoğlu et al., 2015 [ | |
| C57BL/J6 ovariectomized female mice | Low or high dose (2 or 5 mg/kg/day) of myricetin, which is a polyphenol derived from fruits and vegetables, administered intraperitoneally vs. placebo | Huang et al., 2016 [ | |
| Wistar rats | Curcumin (100 mg/kg), resveratrol (10 mg/kg), curcumin + resveratrol or resveratrol alone administered orogastrically | Corrêa et al., 2017 [ | |
| Mangiferin (50 mg/kg) oral application | Li et al., 2017 [ |
EGCG, epigallocatechin gallate, Hypericum perforatum, St. John’s Wart; IL, interleukin, JK-1, Janus kinase-1, NF-κB, nuclear factor-κB, Sunphenon BG, green tea extract, TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor-alpha. Symbol: downward arrow, decrease.
Polyphenols as antioxidant/anti-inflammatory/antimicrobial agents in periodontitis: clinical studies.
| Study Design and Model | Polyphenol | Significant Findings | Author, Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-post intervention, healthy volunteers ( | Pomegranate juice (30 mL) mouth rinse for 2 min | Kote et al., 2011 [ | |
| Crossover RCT, patients with chronic periodontitis ( | Daily oral intake of 6 FV capsules, 6 FVB capsules, or placebo capsules for 2 months | Chapple et al., 2012 [ | |
| Patients with chronic periodontitis ( | Sustained-release green tea extract gel (1%) containing ECGC administered once | Chava & Vedula, 2013 [ | |
| Patients with chronic periodontitis ( | 1% curcumin gel inserted into periodontal pockets with blunt syringe at intervals of 1, 3, and 6 months following the start of the study | Bhatia et al., 2014 [ | |
| Crossover RCT; patients with moderate chronic periodontitis ( | Oral intake 3 times a day for 4 weeks of 30 g dark chocolate with 78% cacao (containing flavonoids such as catechin and procyanidins) or white chocolate placebo | Roodgaryan et al., 2015 [ | |
| Patients treated with root planning and scaling ( | 10% | Grover et al., 2016 [ | |
| Patients with mild to moderate periodontitis ( | Green tea extract dentifrice with 60–90% EGCG or placebo dentifrice with fluoride and triclosan, brushed onto teeth for 2–5 min daily for 4 weeks | Hrishi et al., 2016 [ |
CAL, clinical attachment level, CFUs, colony-forming units, EGCG, epigallocatechin gallate; FV, fruit/vegetable-containing capsules, FVB, fruit/vegetable/berry-containing capsules, GI, gingival index, GST, glutathione-S-transferase, MPBI, modified papillary bleeding index, mSBI, modified sulcus bleeding index, PD, probing depth, PPD, probing pocket depth, rCAL, relative clinical attachment level, RCT, randomized clinical trial, TAC, total antioxidant capacity. Symbol: downward arrow, decrease.
Summary of mechanisms of action of dietary polyphenols in periodontitis.
| Polyphenol | Mechanisms of Action |
|---|---|
| Resveratrol | Reduces NO expression by |
| Blueberry flavonoids, phenolic acids, and procyanidins e.g., chlorogenic acid, ellagic acid, quercetin, anthocyanins, and proanthocyanidins | Reduce bacterial growth and biofilm formation via antibacterial, inhibitory effects against Gram-negative bacteria such as |
| EGCG | Inhibits release of inflammatory cytokines (IL-17, IL-1β) by modulating gene expression pathways (e.g., NF-κB), and decreasing inflammation/oxidation by increasing the activity of GST [ |
| RA1 | Inhibit adhesion of bacteria through a specific activity of galloylated oligomeric proanthocyanidins [ |
| Curcumin | Inhibits planktonic growth by decreasing metabolic activity of bacterial species [ |
| Curcumin + Resveratrol | Reduces gingival IL-1β and inhibits NF-κB, which lowers proteasome activity and resulting cell damage and inflammation [ |
| Pyrogallol | Inhibits planktonic growth by reducing biomass of planktonic films [ |
| Pyrocatechol | Inhibits planktonic growth by reducing biomass of planktonic films [ |
| Quercetin | Inhibits planktonic growth by reducing biomass of planktonic films [ |
| Cranberry flavonoids and proanthocyanidins | Inhibit IL-6 production and MMP-3 by suppressing the NF-κB and MAPK/AP-1 signaling pathways [ |
| Reduce adhesion of | |
| Tea polyphenols e.g., theaflavins | Inhibit biofilm formation and adhesion of pathogens to the oral mucosa likely by binding to receptors in the bacterial cell wall [ |
| Inhibits inflammatory cytokine production by suppressing NF-κB p65 pathway and reducing NO expression by pathogenic bacteria through the suppression of the iNOS system [ | |
| Myricetin | Reduces alveolar bone loss by inhibiting osteoclastogenesis [ |
| Mangiferin | Suppresses TNF-alpha production and inhibits phosphorylation of NF-κB and JK-1 pathways, which inhibits production of inflammatory cytokines and alleviates tissue injury [ |
| Pomegranate phenolic compounds | Reduces number of pathogenic |
| Cacao flavonoids | Decrease lipid peroxidation and improve gingival bleeding [ |
| May reduce inflammation by suppressing the action of histamine, serotonin, prostaglandins, and other inflammatory mediators [ |
AP-1, activator protein-1, EGCG, epigallocatechin gallate, GST, glutathione-S-transferase, HPLC, human periodontal ligament cell, IL-1β, interleukin-1β, IL-6, interleukin-6, IL-17, interleukin-17, iNOS, inducible nitric oxide synthase, JK-1, Janus-kinase 1 pathway, MAPK, mitogen-activated protein kinases, MMP-3, matrix metalloproteinase-3, NF-κB, nuclear factor-κB, NO, nitric oxide, RA1, rumex acetosa extract (polyphenol), TNF-alpha, tumor necrosis factor-alpha.
Figure 1Overview of the role of dietary polyphenols in the management of periodontitis.