Heterogeneity of human serum antibody responses to P. gingivalis in periodontitis: Effects of age, race/ethnicity, and sex

•Study of antigenic diversity of P. gingivalis in periodontal disease.•Antibody levels in the oldest age group were lower than in the youngest groups.•The older group had fewer with high levels of antibody to more than 1 strain.•P. gingivalis may demonstrate antigenic diversity/drift with these chro...

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Published in:Immunology letters Vol. 218; pp. 11 - 21
Main Authors: Ebersole, J.L., Al-Sabbagh, M., Dawson, D.R.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Netherlands Elsevier B.V 01-02-2020
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Summary:•Study of antigenic diversity of P. gingivalis in periodontal disease.•Antibody levels in the oldest age group were lower than in the youngest groups.•The older group had fewer with high levels of antibody to more than 1 strain.•P. gingivalis may demonstrate antigenic diversity/drift with these chronic infections. Aging humans display an increased prevalence and severity of periodontitis, although the mechanisms underlying these findings remain poorly understood. This report examined antigenic diversity of P. gingivalis related to disease presence and patient demographics. Serum IgG antibody to P. gingivalis strains ATCC33277, FDC381, W50 (ATCC53978), W83, A7A1-28 (ATCC53977) and A7436 was measured in 426 participants [periodontally healthy (n = 61), gingivitis (N = 66) or various levels of periodontitis (N = 299)]. We hypothesized that antigenic diversity in P. gingivalis could contribute to a lack of “immunity” in the chronic infections of periodontal disease. Across the strains, the antibody levels in the oldest age group were lower than in the youngest groups, and severe periodontitis patients did not show higher antibody with aging. While 80 % of the periodontitis patients in any age group showed an elevated response to at least one of the P. gingivalis strains, the patterns of individual responses in the older group were also substantially different than the other age groups. Significantly greater numbers of older patients showed strain-specific antibody profiles to only 1 strain. The findings support that P. gingivalis may demonstrate antigenic diversity/drift within patients and could be one factor to help explain the inefficiency/ineffectiveness of the adaptive immune response in managing the infection.
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ISSN:0165-2478
1879-0542
1879-0542
DOI:10.1016/j.imlet.2019.12.004