Abstract
Several microorganisms including Porphyromonas gingivalis and Bacteroides forsythus have been implicated to be etiologically important agents of periodontal disease. In this study, we determined the ability of combinations of periodontopathogenic microorganisms to cause tissue destruction in a murine abscess model. Although all bacterial combinations used in this study produced larger abscesses than did monoinfection of each bacterium, the combination of P. gingivalis and B.forsythus showed a synergistic effect on abscess formation. Since these two bacteria have been frequently found together in lesions of periodontitis, these results suggest the significance of their co-infection in the progression of periodontitis. P. gingivalis produces extracellular and cell-associated cysteine proteinases (gingipains) which appear to be involved in its virulence. The rgpA rgpB double and kgp mutants induced significantly smaller abscesses than the wild type. Moreover, the rgpA rgpB kgp triple (gingipain-null) mutant hardly showed lesion formation at all with the experimental conditions used in this study, indicating that these genes encoding gingipains are important for virulence of P. gingivalis. Mixed infection of these P. gingivalis mutants with B. forsythus showed an additive effect on abscess formation, indicating that the gingipains of P. gingivalis may play an important role in the pathological synergism between P. gingivalis and B. forsythus.
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