AI Article Synopsis

  • The oral cavity harbors a vast population of bacteria, and emerging evidence links periodontal disease to Alzheimer's disease (AD) through inflammation and the gut-brain axis.
  • Researchers studied how saliva from periodontitis patients affects cognitive function and AD pathology in transgenic mice, finding that such saliva worsens cognitive decline and increases harmful brain proteins.
  • The findings suggest that periodontitis-related bacteria contribute to AD progression by disrupting gut health and promoting systemic inflammation, offering new insights into potential interventions for AD.

Article Abstract

The oral cavity is the initial chamber of digestive tract; the saliva swallowed daily contains an estimated 1.5 × 10 oral bacteria. Increasing evidence indicates that periodontal pathogens and subsequent inflammatory responses to them contribute to the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD). The intestine and central nervous system jointly engage in crosstalk; microbiota-mediated immunity significantly impacts AD via the gut-brain axis. However, the exact mechanism linking periodontitis to AD remains unclear. In this study, we explored the influence of periodontitis-related salivary microbiota on AD based on the gut-brain crosstalk in APP/PS1 (PAP) transgenic mice. Saliva samples were collected from patients with periodontitis and healthy individuals. The salivary microbiota was gavaged into PAP mice for two months. Continuous gavage of periodontitis-related salivary microbiota in PAP mice impaired cognitive function and increased β-amyloid accumulation and neuroinflammation. Moreover, these AD-related pathologies were consistent with gut microbial dysbiosis, intestinal pro-inflammatory responses, intestinal barrier impairment, and subsequent exacerbation of systemic inflammation, suggesting that the periodontitis-related salivary microbiota may aggravate AD pathogenesis through crosstalk of the gut-brain axis. In this study, we demonstrated that periodontitis might participate in the pathogenesis of AD by swallowing salivary microbiota, verifying the role of periodontitis in AD progression and providing a novel perspective on the etiology and intervention strategies of AD.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9542625PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19490976.2022.2126272DOI Listing

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