Abstract

Butyric acid (BA) is produced by periodontopathic bacterial pathogens and contributes to periodontal disease (PD) induction. Moreover, PD has been associated with detrimental effects which subsequently may lead to systemic disease (SD) development affecting certain organs. Surprisingly, the potential systemic manifestations and organ-localized effects of BA have never been elucidated. Here, we simulated BA-based oral infection among young (20-week-old) rats and isolated blood cytosol to determine BA effects on stress network-related signals [total heme, hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), catalase (CAT), glutathione reductase (GR), free fatty acid (FFA), NADP/NADPH], inflammation-associated signals [caspases (CASP12 and CASP1), IL-1β, TNF-α, metallomatrix proteinase-9 (MMP-9), and toll-like receptor-2 (TLR2)], and neurological blood biomarkers [presenilin (PS1 and PS2) and amyloid precursor protein (APP)]. Similarly, we extracted the brain from both control and BA-treated rats, isolated the major regions (hippocampus, pineal gland, hypothalamus, cerebrum, and cerebellum), and, subsequently, measured stress network-related signals [oxidative stress: total heme, NADPH, H2O2, GR, and FFA; ER stress: GADD153, calcium, CASP1, and CASP3] and a brain neurodegenerative biomarker (Tau). In the blood, we found that BA was no longer detectable. Nevertheless, oxidative stress and inflammation were induced. Interestingly, amounts of representative inflammatory signals (CASP12, CASP1, IL-1β, and TNF-α) decreased while MMP-9 levels increased which we believe would suggest that inflammation was MMP-9-modulated and would serve as an alternative inflammatory mechanism. Similarly, TLR2 activity was increased which would insinuate that neurological blood biomarkers (APP, PS1, and PS2) were likewise affected. In the brain, BA was not detected, however, we found that both oxidative and ER stresses were likewise altered in all brain regions. Interestingly, tau protein amounts were significantly affected in the cerebellar and hippocampal regions which coincidentally are the major brain regions affected in several neurological disorders. Taken together, we propose that gingival BA can potentially cause systemic inflammation ascribable to prolonged systemic manifestations in the blood and localized detrimental effects within the brain organ.

Highlights

  • Periodontal diseases (PD) are often associated with periodontopathic bacteria found in the host oral cavity [1]

  • We observed that all three components were altered at 6 and 12 h post-butyric acid (BA) injection (Figures 1A–C, respectively) which would suggest that oxidative stress was induced

  • We propose that the possible periodontal disease level-butyric acid (PDL-BA)-associated systemic inflammation would entail the sequential network involving blood NADPH, blood H2O2, blood metallomatrix proteinase-9 (MMP-9), brain heme, brain NADPH, brain H2O2, brain GADD153, and brain calcium

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Summary

Introduction

Periodontal diseases (PD) are often associated with periodontopathic bacteria found in the host oral cavity [1]. We showed that BA has prolonged retention within the gingival tissue which in turn gradually enters the blood stream inducing oxidative and ER stresses in the systemic rat blood [9,10,11]. This would mean that BA-related PD induction may likewise serve as a risk factor and have detrimental systemic manifestations; this was never elucidated. It was previously suggested that periodontopathic bacteria can reach the brain via systemic circulation [12] which would insinuate that bacterial products (such as BA) could reach the brain via the same mechanism A better understanding of the possible systemic manifestations and organ-localized effects of BA would highlight the potential role of periodontopathic bacterial products in SD development and, likewise, could lead to therapeutic strategies that aim to hamper bacteria-associated SD development

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