Abstract

In periodontitis Porphyromonas gingivalis contributes to the development of a dysbiotic oral microbiome. This altered ecosystem elicits a diverse innate and adaptive immune response that simultaneously involves Th1, Th17, and Treg cells. It has been shown that Th17 cells can alter their gene expression to produce interferon-gamma (IFN-γ). Forkhead box P3 (Foxp3) is considered the master regulator of Treg cells that produce inhibitory cytokines like IL-10. Differentiation pathways that lead to Th17 and Treg cells from naïve progenitors are considered antagonistic. However, it has been reported that Treg cells expressing IL-17A as well as IFN-γ producing Th17 cells have been observed in several inflammatory conditions. Each scenario appears plausible with T cell transdifferentiation resulting from persistent microbial challenge and consequent inflammation. We established that oral colonization with P. gingivalis drives an initial IL-17A dominated Th17 response in the oral mucosa that is dependent on intraepithelial Langerhans cells (LCs). We hypothesized that Treg cells contribute to this initial IL-17A response through transient expression of IL-17A and that persistent mucosal colonization with P. gingivalis drives Th17 cells toward an IFN-γ phenotype at later stages of infection. We utilized fate-tracking mice where IL-17A- or Foxp3-promoter activity drives the permanent expression of red fluorescent protein tdTomato to test our hypothesis. At day 28 of infection timeline, Th17 cells dominated in the oral mucosa, outnumbering Th1 cells by 3:1. By day 48 this dominance was inverted with Th1 cells outnumbering Th17 cells by nearly 2:1. Tracking tdTomato+ Th17 cells revealed only sporadic transdifferentiation to an IFN-γ-producing phenotype by day 48; the appearance of Th1 cells at day 48 was due to a late de novo Th1 response. tdTomato+ Foxp3+ T cells were 35% of the total live CD4+T cells in the oral mucosa and 3.9% of them developed a transient IL-17A-producing phenotype by day 28. Interestingly, by day 48 these IL-17A-producing Foxp3+ T cells had disappeared. Therefore, persistent oral P. gingivalis infection stimulates an initial IL-17A-biased response led by Th17 cells and a small but significant number of IL-17A-expressing Treg cells that changes into a late de novo Th1 response with only sporadic transdifferentiation of Th17 cells.

Highlights

  • Periodontitis is a destructive inflammatory disease that leads to progressive destruction of the soft tissues and alveolar bone supporting the tooth

  • CD4+ T cells permanently labeled with a fluorescent reporter protein after activation of IL-17A or Forkhead box P3 (Foxp3) promoters were tested for expression of unorthodox cytokines. In this manuscript we present the relative proportion of Th17, Th17-derived Th1-like cells expressing IFN-γ, new Th1 cells, T regulatory cells (Treg) and Treg-derived Th17-like that express IL-17A in murine oral mucosal and cervical lymph nodes over time after persistent oral colonization with Porphyromonas gingivalis (Pg)

  • We have shown previously that Th17 cells are predominant in the early adaptive CD4+ T cell response to Pg in an oral model of periodontitis, and that this response is critically dependent on Langerhans cells (LCs) [39]

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Summary

Introduction

Periodontitis is a destructive inflammatory disease that leads to progressive destruction of the soft tissues and alveolar bone supporting the tooth. This disease represents the sixth most prevalent disease worldwide [1]. Virulence factors of microorganisms like Pg induce inflammation thereby altering the nutrient foundation of the microbial community resulting in population shifts within the consortia [5]. Poorly pathogenic in mono-colonized germ free mice, the dysbiosis induced by Pg in specific pathogen free mice [6] elicits an adaptive CD4+ T cell response against a wide spectrum of antigens originating from the expanded pathobiont population. The resulting immune response eventually leads to progressive destruction of the soft connective tissues and alveolar bone holding teeth in place [7]. Understanding the immunopathogenesis of periodontitis is critical to strategies that seek to prevent, treat or predict future occurrence of disease

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