Abstract

Subgingival bacteria are continually exposed to gingival crevicular fluids that are derived from serum, which contain various bactericidal agents. The periodontopathic bacterium Porphyromonas gingivalis has been demonstrated to possess a variety of abilities to resist bactericidal agents, due to which it is able to propagate in the subgingival environment. We previously demonstrated that the major surface glycoproteins of P. gingivalis—Pgm6 and Pgm7, also called outer membrane protein A-like proteins (OmpALPs)—mediate resistance to the bactericidal activity of human serum, but their precise role remains unknown. In this study, we investigated the sensitivity of the wild-type and Pgm6/Pgm7-deficient P. gingivalis strains toward major antimicrobial peptides in the oral cavity, human β-defensins (hBDs) 1-3, and human cathelicidin LL-37. hBDs showed a considerably weak bactericidal activity against both bacterial strains. LL-37 also showed a weak activity against the wild-type strain; however, it showed a significant activity against the Pgm6/Pgm7-deficient strain. In the Pgm6/Pgm7-deficient strain, LL-37 remarkably accumulated on the bacterial cell surface, which may result in the destruction of the outer membrane. Additionally, the bactericidal activity of hBDs against the Pgm6/Pgm7-deficient strain was found to be synergistically promoted in the presence of LL-37. Our results suggest that OmpALPs specifically protect P. gingivalis from the bactericidal activity of LL-37; thus, P. gingivalis may adeptly survive in LL-37-producing subgingival environments.

Highlights

  • Porphyromonas gingivalis, a gram-negative, anaerobic, and asaccharolytic bacterium, is known as one of the most important periodontogenic pathogens in humans [1]

  • We recently demonstrated that the major surface glycoproteins of P. gingivalis—Pgm6 and Pgm7, called outer membrane protein A- (OmpA-) like proteins (OmpALPs)—are crucial for resistance to the bactericidal activity of human serum, using mutant P. gingivalis strains that were deficient in the two genes encoding outer membrane protein A-like proteins (OmpALPs) [15]

  • We investigated the sensitivity of the wildtype and OmpALP-deficient strains to the antimicrobial cationic peptides hBD1, hBD2, hBD3, and LL-37

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Summary

Introduction

Porphyromonas gingivalis, a gram-negative, anaerobic, and asaccharolytic bacterium, is known as one of the most important periodontogenic pathogens in humans [1]. In adults, this bacterium propagates within the subgingival flora, the proportion of which increases in correlation with the severity of periodontitis [2, 3]. P. gingivalis possesses a variety of abilities to disrupt host defense mechanisms [4, 5] and changes the bacterial composition of subgingival flora [6], which, in turn, promotes development of periodontitis. The propagation of P. gingivalis in such environments is dependent on its strong abilities to resist bactericidal agents. The precise mechanisms of OmpALP-mediated serum resistance have not been clarified yet

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