| Literature DB >> 32944155 |
Aditi Chopra1, Subraya G Bhat2, Karthik Sivaraman1.
Abstract
is an obligate, asaccharolytic, gram-negative bacteria commonly associated with increased periodontal and systemic inflammation. P. gingivalis is known to survive and persist within the host tissues as it modulates the entire ecosystem by either engineering its environment or modifying the host's immune response. It interacts with various host receptors and alters signaling pathways of inflammation, complement system, cell cycle, and apoptosis. P. gingivalis is even known to induce suicidal cell death of the host and other microbes in its vicinity with the emergence of pathobiont species. Recently, new molecular and immunological mechanisms and virulence factors of P. gingivalis that increase its chance of survival and immune evasion within the host have been discovered. Thus, the present paper aims to provide a consolidated update on the new intricate and unique molecular mechanisms and virulence factors of P. gingivalis associated with its survival, persistence, and immune evasion within the host.Entities:
Keywords: Virulence; host; inflammation; microbe; pathogenesis; periodontitis; porphyromonas gingivalis
Year: 2020 PMID: 32944155 PMCID: PMC7482874 DOI: 10.1080/20002297.2020.1801090
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Oral Microbiol ISSN: 2000-2297 Impact factor: 5.474
Figure 1.Virulence factors of P. gingivalis: P gingivalis has various virulence factors that help it to invade the host cell and evade the defense mechanisms of the host. Some of the most important adhesions of P. gingivalis include Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), Capsule, outer Membrane protein, Peptidoglycan, Major, and minor Fimbriae and Pilli. P. gingivalis also release enzymes and cytotoxic molecules such as defensins, autoinducer proteins (AI-2); 8 hydroxy 2ʹ deoxyguanosine, superoxide anions, matrix metalloproteinases, caspase-3, catalase, nucleotide-diphosphate-kinase. These enzymes help to invade the host cell, increase oxidative stress, and enhance biofilm formation. P. gingivalis is also known to release endogenous antioxidants such as thiol, peroxidase, glutathione, superoxide dismutase, rubrerythrin to protect itself from the surrounding free radicals.
Novel Pathogenic mechanisms adopted by P. gingivalis to exaggerate periodontal inflammation.
| S/No | Pathogenic mechanisms | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Synergistic interaction with other organisms and the development of pathobiont species | Growth of bystander or commensal microbiota The emergence of pathobiont species such as Activation of intracellular nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain 1 (Nod1) A shift of nutrient requirement from protein-dependent to carbohydrate dependent Non-identity-mediated CRISPR-bacteriophage interaction Co-operative haem acquisition by the HmuY haemophore of Porphyromonas gingivalis | Kolenbrander et al., 2006 |
| 2. | Survival in the host cell and neutrophil dysfunction | Regulation of expression of E-selectin on the endothelial cell surface Binding of FimA to β1 integrin receptor Induces the expression of transposases Release of serine phosphatase protein (SerB) and dephosphorylates the actin-depolymerizing molecule ‘cofilin’ Activates Heat Shock Protein (HSP) and GAPDH (glyceraldehyde 3 phosphate dehydrogenase) receptors Inhibit IL 8, cytokine-induced neutrophil chemoattractant (CINC) 2αβ Induce microRNAs (miR-105 and miR-203). | Reife et al., 2006 |
| 3. | Anti-apoptotic mechanism | Inhibition of Janus A Kinase (JAK), Phosphoinositide 3 Kinase (PI3 K), Signal Transducer of Activation (STAT), alpha-serine/threonine-protein kinase (Akt) and purinoceptor (P2X7 receptors). Activate p38, mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), and extracellular-signal-regulated kinase (Erk1/2) pathways. Decrease expression of cyclin D at the G1 phase. Increase Apoptotic protease activating factor (Apaf 1), B-cell lymphoma Associated X (Bax1) and Caspase 3 production Reduce B-cell lymphoma (BCL 2) expression Regulate NLR family pyrin domain containing 3 (NLRP3) inflammasome expression | Zaric et al., 2010 |
| 4. | Increased proinflammatory cytokine production | Binding of LPS to Toll-like receptors (TLRs), Receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa-B ligand (RANKL) and complement receptor (CR) A shift of LPS moiety from Penta acylated to tetra acylated isoform Activation of TLR 2/4 and C5aR on the neutrophil surface LPS induced increase in Thrombospondin 1 (TSP) production and Plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 expression Down-regulate T-helper 1 (Th 1) cells Activation of Protease-activated receptor (PAR) 2 and soluble triggering receptor (sTREM) Increase production of IL17 | Lu et al., 2009 |
| 5. | Subversion of the complement system | Inhibits all components of the complement system and degradation of its by-products (C3a and C5a) Prevents formation of membrane attack complex (MAC) by inhibiting Mannose-binding lectin (MBL), Ficolins (FCN), C3, C3b, and C4. Utilizes HRgpA gingipain to entrap the circulating C4b binding protein. | Sundqvist et al., 1985 |
| 6. | Disruption of T cell function | Induce Th1 immune response and increase secretion of IL 1, IL6, IL10 production A decrease in levels of IL12 and increased production of Interferon-alpha Favors Th-17 activation by interaction with dendritic cells of the host | Cardoso et al., 2009 |
| 7. | Suppression of macrophage activity | Increase cAMP formation Reduce the expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) Activation of caspase 11 dependent non-canonical inflammasome in the macrophage Altered macrophage function and antigen presentation Attenuate CR3 activation in macrophages, reduce inhibition of lncRNA GAS5, with less miR-21 and more IL12 production. by inhibiting sialidase | Nathan., 2012 |
| 8. | Modulation of gene expression in the host and other bacteria | Modify levels of hemin, polyphosphate, rhein, polyphosphate, Temperature-dependent modulation of Porphyromonas gingivalis lipid A structure Upregulation of putative transposases in Upregulation of CRISPR RNA and toxin-antitoxin system proteins | Anaya-Bergman et al., 2006; Phillips et al., 2006; Al-Qutub et al., 2006 |
| 9. | Fratricide and altruistic ‘suicide’ of other bacteria | Release of Choline Binding protein D (CbpD), competence-induced bacteriocins (CibAB), Activation of Autolysin-Encoding Gene Activation of bacterial apoptosis endonuclease (BapE) | Duran-Pinedo et al., 2014 |
| 10. | Increased production of antioxidant species | Activation of NOX 4 receptors Increase extracellular ATP production by activation of P2X4, P2X7, JAK2, and pannexin-1 receptor Increase production of NADPH oxidase Intracellular release of endogenous antioxidants like thiol peroxidase, glutathione, superoxide dismutase, rubrerythrin | Gölz et al., 2014 |
Figure 2.P. gingivalis modulates the host immune response by facilitating the growth of pathobionts species and altering the function of various immune cells of the host. The weakened immune response enhances biofilm formation and oxidative stress that in turn increases the periodontal inflammation and favors the growth of P. gingivalis [Abbreviation: CR- complement receptors; TLR- Toll-like receptors; ROS-Reactive oxygen species; MMPS- matrix metalloproteinase; IL- interleukin; RANKL- Receptor activator of nuclear factor-kappa beta; TNF- Tumor Necrotic Factor-alpha; Th – T helper cells]. [Abbreviation: CR- complement receptors; TLR- Toll-like receptors; ROS-Reactive oxygen species; MMPS- matrix metalloproteinase; IL- Interleukin; RANKL- Receptor activator of nuclear factor-kappa beta; TNF- Tumor Necrotic Factor-alpha; Th – T helper cells; NOD-nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain; NF-Kb – Nuclear Factor kappa Beta].
Figure 5.Schematic representation of the interaction between : P. gingivalis interacts with S. gordonii by utilizing its major (FimA) and minor fimbriae (Mfa1). FimA and Mfa1 of P. gingivalis binds to glyceraldehyde‐3‐phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) and streptococcal SspA/B adhesins (SspA/B termed BAR antigen I/II) of S. gordonii, respectively The Mfa1 interactions with SspB lead to phenotypic changes with subsequent activation of tyrosine phosphorylation signal production (PTK). The increased PTK signaling causes exopolysaccharide formation that causes accretion of P. gingivalis colonies. The FimA also interacts to the α5β1-integrin receptors on gingival epithelial to facilitate bacterial entry.
Figure 3.Interaction of P. gingivalis with F. alocis and its effects on biofilm formation and periodontal inflammation: P. gingivalis interaction with F. alocis can modulate the innate immune response of the host as both these species auto-aggregate and express unique genes expression. P. gingivalis-F. alocis remodeling the actin and chromatin molecule, activation of autoinducer (AI) associated quorum sensing, the proliferation of the junctional epithelium, and deposition of collagen fibers in the gingival epithelial cells. The co-infection also upregulates the production of extracellular matrix adhesion proteins, CRISPRs RNA, and toxin-antitoxin system proteins that increase the adherence and colonization of P. gingivalis with other ‘Gram-positive bacteria and host tissues’, and are directly linked with increased biofilm formation. The CRISPR-RNA also helps with triggering the stress response, chaperone formation, and horizontal gene transfer among oral bacteria that favor microbial community development.
Figure 4.Modulation of immunoinflammatory response by two forms of P. gingivalis lipid A depending on the microenvironment (hemin level) and their interference in TLR4 receptor signaling downstream activation. It can regulate the inflammatory response according to changes in the environmental conditions by changing its LPS moiety [Abbreviation: LPS: lipopolysaccharide; p65: nuclear factor NF-κB protein p65 subunit; p50: nuclear factor NF-κB protein p50 subunit; TLR4: Toll-like receptor-4; TRAF 6: tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated factor 6; TRIF: TIR-domain-containing adapter-inducing interferon-β; TRAM: TRIF-related adaptor molecule].
Figure 6.Schematic representation Immune response pathways triggered by the activation of TLR2/TLR4/CXCR5/C5aR receptors by gingipains P. gingivalis: The gingipains of P. gingivalis degrade the C5 and C3 from the complement system and degrade them C5a and C3a. The C5a interacts with the receptors on the neutrophils, epithelial cells, and endothelium in the host to Impairs phagocytosis and increase proinflammatory cytokine. C3a also inhibits the caspase 11–dependent non-canonical inflammasome pathway and prevents the apoptosis of the cell and allows P. gingivalis to use the host cell for its growth. The C5aR-TLR2 cross-talk activated by P. gingivalis pili induced degradation of MyD88 in neutrophils. In the absence of MyD88, the co-association of C5aR-TLR2 promotes P. gingivalis infection v activation of the TIRAP-dependent PI3 K signaling pathway. This, in turn, causes an inflammatory cytokine TNF-α along with inhibition of RhoA activation and actin polymerization that impairs the process of the maturation of phagosomes and P. gingivalis phagocytosis [Abbreviation: CR- complement receptors; TLR- Toll-like receptors; CXCR4: C-X-C chemokine receptor type 4; cAMP: cyclic adenosine monophosphate; iNOS: inducible nitric oxide synthase; Mal: MyD88 adapter-like; p38MAPK: mitogen-activated protein kinase p38; PKA: protein kinase A; PI3 K: phosphoinositide-3-kinase; RhoA: Ras homolog gene family, member A; sTREM-1 – sTREM-1 – salivary Triggering Receptor Expressed on Myeloid cells 1ʹ Protease-activated receptors [PAR]-2].
Figure 7.Schematic presentation of the immunological pathways triggered by LPS of P.gingivalis.