Recent Research Shows Oral Bacteria Suppress Protection Against Viral Growth

 Recent Research Shows Oral Bacteria Suppress Protection Against Viral Growth

Recent research from University of Louisville School of Dentistry (UofL) shows the bacteria that causes periodontal diseases reduces oral defense and increases viral growth.

University researchers and their colleagues discovered details of how proteins produced by oral epithelial cells protect people against viruses entering the body through the mouth, and how oral bacteria can suppress the activity of those cells—leaving patients more vulnerable to infection, according to a press release.

A family of proteins known as interferon lambdas produced by epithelial cells in the mouth serve to protect humans from viral infection, but the oral bacteria Porphyromonas gingivalis reduces their production and effectiveness.

“Our studies identified certain pathogenic bacterial species, P. gingivalis, which cause periodontal disease, can completely suppress interferon production and severely enhance susceptibility to viral infection,” said Juhi Bagaitkar, assistant professor in the UofL Department of Oral Immunology and Infectious Disease, according to the release. “These resident oral plaque bacteria play a key role in regulating anti-viral responses.”

Bagaitkar and Richard Lamont, professor and chair of the UofL Department of Oral Immunology and Infectious Disease, led the work, with first author Carlos J. Rodriguez-Hernandez and other colleagues at UofL and at Washington University in St. Louis. The findings were published in December in PNAS.

The mouth is a gateway into the body for viruses that infect the gastrointestinal tract and lungs such as SARS-CoV-2, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), herpes simplex and human papillomavirus (HPV).

P. gingivalis, a common oral bacterium that causes periodontal disease, has been linked to many other diseases, including Alzheimer’s disease and rheumatoid arthritis. Recent clinical studies have shown immune suppression in patients with periodontitis can enhance susceptibility to HIV, herpes simplex and HPV. Research at UofL has revealed connections between P. gingivalis and multiple other diseases and conditions, including rheumatoid arthritis, Alzheimer’s disease and esophageal cancer.

Better “understanding of how interferons provide broad antiviral protection and activate antiviral genes to protect people from viruses, as well as how P. gingivalis compromises their protection, may lead researchers to clinical approaches to increase that protection,” according to the release. 

View Full Press Release

Source: University of Louisville School of Dentistry

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