J Korean Soc Microbiol.
2000 Jun;35(3):203-214.
Possibility of involvement of Porphyromonas gingivalis in coronary heart
disease
- Affiliations
-
- 1Department of Oral Microbiology, School of Dentistry,
Kyung Hee University, 1 Hoeki-Dong, Dongdaemoon-Ku, Seoul, 130-701, South Korea.
ljinyong@nms.kyunghee.ac.kr
Abstract
-
Porphyromonas gingivalis has been implicated in periodontal
diseases. Accumulating evidence suggests that cardiovascular disease is
the most prevalent medical problem in patients with periodontal diseases.
In order to check the possibility that P. gingivalis is involved in
coronary heart disease, the present study was performed to observe P.
gingivalis adherence and invasion of human coronary artery endothelial
cells (HCAEC) and production of cytokines and growth factors by HCAEC
upon P. gingivalis infection. 3H-labeled P. gingivalis 381 was incubated
with HCAEC for 90 min. The radioactivity of the washed HCAEC was a
measure of the absorbed (adhering and invading) P. gingivalis. The
absorption radioactivity of the HCAEC infected by P. gingivalis was
determined to be 59.58% of the input bacterial cells. In contrast, the
absorption radioactivity of the cells infected by S. gordonii Challis
which was employed as a control was negligible (0.59%). DPG3, a P.
gingivalis mutant defective of fimbriae, appeared to be impaired to some
extent in capability of adherence/invasion as compared to that of the
parental strain 381, showing 43.04% of the absorption radioactivity. The
absorption radioactivity of the HCAEC infected by P. gingivalis 381 in
the presence of excessive fimbriae at the concentrations of 50 mug and
100 mug/ml was 57.27 and 45.44%, respectively. Invasion of HCAEC by P.
gingivalis 381 was observed by an antibiotic (metronidazole) protection
assay and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). In the antibiotic
protection assay, invasion by the bacterium was measured to be 0.73,
1.09, and 1.51% of the input bacterial cells after incubation for 30, 60,
and 90 min, respectively. Invasion by DPG3 was shown to be 0.16% after
90-min incubation. In comparison of invasion efficiency at 90 min of the
incubation, the invasion efficiency of DPG3 was 0.37% while that of its
parental strain 381 was 2.54%. The immunoblot analysis revealed fimbriae
of P. gingivalis did not interact with the surface of HCAEC. These
results
suggest that fimbriae are not the major contribution to the
adherence of P. gingivalis to HCAEC but may be important in the invasion
of HCAEC by the bacterium. The presence of cytochalasin D (1 mug/ml) and
staurosporine (1 muM) reduced the invasion of HCAEC by P. gingivalis 381
by 78.86 and 53.76%, respectively, indicating that cytoskeletal
rearrangement and protein kinase of HCAEC are essential for the invasion.
Infection of P. gingivalis induced HCAEC to increase the production of
TNF-alpha by 60.6%. At 90 min of the incubation, the HCAEC infected with
P. gingivalis cells was apparently atypical in the shape, showing loss of
the nuclear membrane and subcellular organelles. The overall results
suggest that P. gingivalis may cause coronary heart disease by adhering
to and invading endothelial cells, and subsequently damaging the cells.