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Wiley InterScience | ||
![]() Journal of Clinical PeriodontologyVolume 34 Issue 9, Pages 736 - 747 Published Online: 16 Aug 2007 © 2010 John Wiley & Sons A/S The official publication of the European Federation of Periodontology
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 1413K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Periodontal therapy alters gene expression of peripheral blood monocytes Copyright © 2007 Blackwell Munksgaard KEYWORDS atherosclerosis • cytokines • genomics • infection • inflammation • periodontitis Papapanou PN, Sedaghatfar MH, Demmer RT, Wolf DL, Yang J, Roth GA, Celenti R, Belusko PB, Lalla E, Pavlidis P. Periodontal therapy alters gene expression of peripheral blood monocytes. J Clin Periodontol 2007; 34: 736–747. doi: 10.1111/j.1600-051X.2007.01113.x. ABSTRACTAims: We investigated the effects of periodontal therapy on gene expression of peripheral blood monocytes. Methods: Fifteen patients with periodontitis gave blood samples at four time points: 1 week before periodontal treatment (#1), at treatment initiation (baseline, #2), 6-week (#3) and 10-week post-baseline (#4). At baseline and 10 weeks, periodontal status was recorded and subgingival plaque samples were obtained. Periodontal therapy (periodontal surgery and extractions without adjunctive antibiotics) was completed within 6 weeks. At each time point, serum concentrations of 19 biomarkers were determined. Peripheral blood monocytes were purified, RNA was extracted, reverse-transcribed, labelled and hybridized with AffymetrixU133Plus2.0 chips. Expression profiles were analysed using linear random-effects models. Further analysis of gene ontology terms summarized the expression patterns into biologically relevant categories. Differential expression of selected genes was confirmed by real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction in a subset of patients. Results: Treatment resulted in a substantial improvement in clinical periodontal status and reduction in the levels of several periodontal pathogens. Expression profiling over time revealed more than 11,000 probe sets differentially expressed at a false discovery rate of <0.05. Approximately 1/3 of the patients showed substantial changes in expression in genes relevant to innate immunity, apoptosis and cell signalling. Conclusions: The data suggest that periodontal therapy may alter monocytic gene expression in a manner consistent with a systemic anti-inflammatory effect. Accepted for publication 7 June 2007 |