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10.1177/00220345211040729

http://scihub22266oqcxt.onion/10.1177/00220345211040729
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34636272!8982008!34636272
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suck abstract from ncbi

pmid34636272      J+Dent+Res 2022 ; 101 (3): 348-356
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  • Novel Preosteoclast Populations in Obesity-Associated Periodontal Disease #MMPMID34636272
  • Kwack KH; Zhang L; Sohn J; Maglaras V; Thiyagarajan R; Kirkwood KL
  • J Dent Res 2022[Mar]; 101 (3): 348-356 PMID34636272show ga
  • Although there is a clear relationship between the degree of obesity and periodontal disease incidence, the mechanisms that underpin the links between these conditions are not completely understood. Understanding that myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) are expanded during obesity and operate in a context-defined manner, we addressed the potential role of MDSCs to contribute toward obesity-associated periodontal disease. Flow cytometry revealed that in the spleen of mice fed a high-fat diet (HFD), expansion in monocytic MDSCs (M-MDSCs) significantly increased when compared with mice fed a low-fat diet (LFD). In the osteoclast differentiation assay, M-MDSCs isolated from the bone marrow of HFD-fed mice showed a larger number and area of osteoclasts with a greater number of nuclei. In the M-MDSCs of HFD-fed mice, several osteoclast-related genes were significantly elevated when compared with LFD-fed mice according to a focused transcriptomic platform. In experimental periodontitis, the number and percentage of M-MDSCs were greater, with a significantly larger increase in HFD-fed mice versus LFD-fed mice. In the spleen, the percentage of M-MDSCs was significantly higher in HFD-fed periodontitis-induced (PI) mice than in LFD-PI mice. Alveolar bone volume fraction was significantly reduced in experimental periodontitis and was further decreased in HFD-PI mice as compared with LFD-PI mice. The inflammation score was significantly higher in HFD-PI mice versus LFD-PI mice, with a concomitant increase in TRAP staining for osteoclast number and area in HFD-PI mice over LFD-PI mice. These data support the concept that M-MDSC expansion during obesity to become osteoclasts during periodontitis is related to increased alveolar bone destruction, providing a more detailed mechanistic appreciation of the interconnection between obesity and periodontitis.
  • |*Diet, High-Fat/adverse effects[MESH]
  • |*Periodontal Diseases/complications[MESH]
  • |Animals[MESH]
  • |Mice[MESH]
  • |Mice, Inbred C57BL[MESH]
  • |Obesity/complications[MESH]


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