Sixin Liu, Catherine A Butler, Scott Ayton, Eric C Reynolds, Stuart G Dashper
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The cause of Alzheimer's disease (AD), and the pathophysiological mechanisms involved, remain major unanswered questions in medical science. Oral bacteria, especially those species associated with chronic periodontitis and particularly Porphyromonas gingivalis, are being linked causally to AD pathophysiology in a subpopulation of susceptible individuals. P. gingivalis produces large amounts of proteolytic enzymes, haem and iron capture proteins, adhesins and internalins that are secreted and attached to the cell surface and concentrated onto outer membrane vesicles (OMVs). These enzymes and adhesive proteins have been shown to cause host tissue damage and stimulate inflammatory responses. The ecological and pathophysiological roles of P. gingivalis OMVs, their ability to disperse widely throughout the host and deliver functional proteins lead to the proposal that they may be the link between a P. gingivalis focal infection in the subgingivae during periodontitis and neurodegeneration in AD. P. gingivalis OMVs can cross the blood brain barrier and may accelerate AD-specific neuropathology by increasing neuroinflammation, plaque/tangle formation and dysregulation of iron homeostasis, thereby inducing ferroptosis leading to neuronal death and neurodegeneration.
阿尔茨海默病(AD)的病因及其病理生理机制仍然是医学界的一大未解之谜。口腔细菌,尤其是那些与慢性牙周炎有关的细菌,特别是牙龈卟啉单胞菌,在易感人群中与阿兹海默症的病理生理学有因果关系。牙龈卟啉单胞菌会产生大量的蛋白水解酶、血红素和铁捕获蛋白、粘附蛋白和内部蛋白,这些蛋白会分泌并附着在细胞表面,并集中在外膜囊泡上。这些酶和粘附蛋白已被证明会造成宿主组织损伤并刺激炎症反应。牙龈脓疱疮菌 OMVs 的生态和病理生理作用,以及它们在宿主体内广泛分散和传递功能性蛋白质的能力,使人们提出它们可能是牙周炎期间牙龈下牙龈脓疱疮菌病灶感染与 AD 神经变性之间的联系。牙龈脓疱瘤病毒(P. gingivalis OMVs)可以穿过血脑屏障,通过增加神经炎症、斑块/纠结的形成和铁平衡失调,从而诱导铁变态反应,导致神经元死亡和神经退行性变,从而加速 AD 特异性神经病理学的发展。
期刊介绍:
Critical Reviews in Microbiology is an international, peer-reviewed journal that publishes comprehensive reviews covering all areas of microbiology relevant to humans and animals, including medical and veterinary microbiology, public health and environmental microbiology. These may include subjects related to microbial molecular biology, immunopathogenicity, physiology, biochemistry, structure, and epidemiology. Of particular interest are reviews covering clinical aspects of bacterial, virological, fungal and parasitic diseases. All reviews must be analytical, comprehensive, and balanced in nature. Editors welcome uninvited submissions, as well as suggested topics for reviews accompanied by an abstract.