Salivary concentration of free LL-37 in edentulism, chronic periodontitis and healthy periodontium.
Davidopoulou. Sotiria S; Diza. Eudoxia E; Sakellari. Dimitra D; Menexes. George G; Kalfas. Sotirios S
Key Findings
- Healthy gums → highest salivary LL‑37; chronic periodontitis → lower; edentulous → very low
- Women in the healthy group had higher LL‑37 than men
- LL‑37 levels varied widely in healthy and periodontitis groups but were uniformly low in edentulous subjects
Practical Outcomes
- Maintain good oral hygiene and preserve natural teeth to support innate immune peptides like LL‑37. Loss of teeth dramatically reduces LL‑37, potentially weakening oral immunity. While no direct supplementation is suggested, focusing on gum health may be a simple way to keep this protective peptide at optimal levels.
Summary
The study found that people with healthy gums have the most LL‑37, an antimicrobial peptide, in their saliva, while those with gum disease have less, and people without teeth have the least. Women with healthy gums showed slightly higher levels than men. This suggests that keeping your teeth and gums intact may help maintain natural oral defenses.
Abstract
The antimicrobial peptide LL-37, a component of innate immunity, has an important role in maintaining oral health. This study aimed to investigate the concentration of free LL-37 in whole saliva of periodontally healthy, edentulous and chronic periodontitis subjects. Unstimulated whole saliva was sampled from 154 subjects (76 periodontally healthy, 20 edentulous, and 58 subjects with chronic periodontitis). All participants were in good general health. The salivary LL-37 was determined by ELISA. The median salivary concentrations of free LL-37 were 30.5, 22.5, and 1.8ng/ml for the healthy, the chronic periodontitis and the edentulous group, respectively. The differences in concentration between the edentulous and the others were statistically significant (Mann-Whitney test, p<0.001). In the healthy subjects, women displayed significantly higher peptide concentrations compared to men (Mann-Whitney test, p<0.05). The intra-subject variation in LL-37 concentration was wider for the healthy (range 0.75-285ng/ml) and chronic periodontitis patients (range 1-207ng/ml) than for the edentulous subjects (range 0.15-4.4ng/ml). The present findings show that edentulism correlates with a substantial decrease in salivary levels of free LL-37, thus indicating the considerable contribution of the gingival tissues in the secretion of the peptide in the oral environment.
Study Information
pubmed
2013
2013-02-08T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.archoralbio.2013.01.003
32
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