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Periodontal dysbiosis linked to periodontitis is associated with cardiometabolic adaptation to high-fat diet in mice

Authors :
Vincent Azalbert
F. Reichardt
Anaïs Giry
Pascale Loubieres
Vincent Blasco-Baque
Pauline Marck
Maxime Branchereau
Christophe Heymes
André Colom
François Tercé
Matteo Serino
Roshan Padmanabhan
Aurélie Waget
Jason S. Iacovoni
Rémy Burcelin
Source :
American journal of physiology. Gastrointestinal and liver physiology. 310(11)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Periodontitis and type 2 diabetes are connected pandemic diseases, and both are risk factors for cardiovascular complications. Nevertheless, the molecular factors relating these two chronic pathologies are poorly understood. We have shown that, in response to a long-term fat-enriched diet, mice present particular gut microbiota profiles related to three metabolic phenotypes: diabetic-resistant (DR), intermediate (Inter), and diabetic-sensitive (DS). Moreover, many studies suggest that a dysbiosis of periodontal microbiota could be associated with the incidence of metabolic and cardiac diseases. We investigated whether periodontitis together with the periodontal microbiota may also be associated with these different cardiometabolic phenotypes. We report that the severity of glucose intolerance is related to the severity of periodontitis and cardiac disorders. In detail, alveolar bone loss was more accentuated in DS than Inter, DR, and normal chow-fed mice. Molecular markers of periodontal inflammation, such as TNF-α and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 mRNA levels, correlated positively with both alveolar bone loss and glycemic index. Furthermore, the periodontal microbiota of DR mice was dominated by the Streptococcaceae family of the phylum Firmicutes, whereas the periodontal microbiota of DS mice was characterized by increased Porphyromonadaceae and Prevotellaceae families. Moreover, in DS mice the periodontal microbiota was indicated by an abundance of the genera Prevotella and Tannerella, which are major periodontal pathogens. PICRUSt analysis of the periodontal microbiome highlighted that prenyltransferase pathways follow the cardiometabolic adaptation to a high-fat diet. Finally, DS mice displayed a worse cardiac phenotype, percentage of fractional shortening, heart rhythm, and left ventricle weight-to-tibia length ratio than Inter and DR mice. Together, our data show that periodontitis combined with particular periodontal microbiota and microbiome is associated with metabolic adaptation to a high-fat diet related to the severity of cardiometabolic alteration.

Details

ISSN :
15221547
Volume :
310
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of physiology. Gastrointestinal and liver physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....08ad0ac42bcff5b8f1e2d75876470733