Associations between inflammation-related LL-37 with subgingival microbial dysbiosis in rheumatoid arthritis patients.
Cheah. Chia Wei CW; Al-Maleki. Anis Rageh AR; Vaithilingam. Rathna Devi RD; Vadivelu. Jamuna J; Sockalingam. Sargunan S; Baharuddin. Nor Adinar NA; Bartold. Peter Mark PM
Key Findings
- RA patients show subgingival microbial dysbiosis, especially with periodontitis
- LL‑37 levels are positively linked to disease‑associated bacteria and negatively to health‑associated bacteria
- Bacterial networks in RA with gum disease are more complex and include both harmful and beneficial genera
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the main takeaway is to keep a close eye on gum health, especially if you have inflammatory conditions. Regular dental check‑ups and good oral hygiene may help limit bacterial imbalances that could worsen systemic inflammation, but the study doesn’t provide a specific LL‑37 supplement or dosage to try.
Summary
The study found that people with rheumatoid arthritis have an imbalance of bacteria under the gums, and the immune‑related peptide LL‑37 is linked to these changes, but it doesn’t give clear steps you can take to use LL‑37 for health benefits.
Abstract
This study investigated the subgingival microbial profile of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients and its associations with disease parameters and the inflammation-related antimicrobial peptide, LL-37. RA and non-RA (NRA) patients were assessed for periodontal status and divided into periodontitis (CP), gingivitis (G), and healthy (H) groups. Subgingival plaque 16s rRNA gene sequencing data was processed and analyzed using the CLC Genomic Workbench (Qiagen). Bacterial diversity and co-occurrence patterns were examined. Differential abundance between groups was also investigated. Associations between bacterial genera with disease parameters and LL-37 levels were explored qualitatively using canonical correlation analysis. Subgingival microbial community clustered in CP status. Co-occurrence network in NRA-H was dominated by health-associated genera, while the rest of the networks' key genera were both health- and disease-associated. RA-CP displayed highly inter-generic networks with a statistically significant increase in periodontal disease-associated genera (p<0.05). In NRA-H, disease parameters and LL-37 were correlated positively with disease-associated genera while negatively with health-associated genera. However, in the remaining groups, mixed positive and negative correlations were noted with genera. RA patients demonstrated subgingival microbial dysbiosis where the bacteria networks were dominated by health- and disease-associated genera. Mixed correlations with disease parameters and LL-37 levels were noted. The subgingival microbial dysbiosis in RA may predispose these patients to developing periodontal inflammation with an associated detrimental effect on host immune responses. Routine periodontal assessment may allow initiation of treatment strategies to minimize the effects of gingival inflammation on the existing heightened immune response present in RA patients.
Study Information
pubmed
2022
2022-03-07T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s00784-022-04388-y
8
59