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Effect of Bacteria on the Wound Healing Behavior of Oral Epithelial Cells

Wounded tissue offers opportunity to microflora to adhere, colonize, invade and infect surrounding healthy tissue. The bacteria of the oral cavity have the potential to alter the wound healing process by interacting with keratinocytes. The aim of this study was to investigate mechanisms through whic...

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Autores principales: Bhattacharya, Rupa, Xu, Fanxing, Dong, Guangyu, Li, Shuai, Tian, Chen, Ponugoti, Bhaskar, Graves, Dana T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3931835/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24586806
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0089475
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author Bhattacharya, Rupa
Xu, Fanxing
Dong, Guangyu
Li, Shuai
Tian, Chen
Ponugoti, Bhaskar
Graves, Dana T.
author_facet Bhattacharya, Rupa
Xu, Fanxing
Dong, Guangyu
Li, Shuai
Tian, Chen
Ponugoti, Bhaskar
Graves, Dana T.
author_sort Bhattacharya, Rupa
collection PubMed
description Wounded tissue offers opportunity to microflora to adhere, colonize, invade and infect surrounding healthy tissue. The bacteria of the oral cavity have the potential to alter the wound healing process by interacting with keratinocytes. The aim of this study was to investigate mechanisms through which oral bacteria may influence re-epithelialization by interacting with gingival keratinocytes. By an in vitro scratch assay we demonstrate that primary gingival keratinocytes have impaired closure when exposed to two well characterized oral bacteria, P. gingivalis, and to a lesser extent, F. nucleatum. P. gingivalis reduced wound closure by ∼40%, which was partially dependent on proteolytic activity, and bacteria was still present within infected cells 9 days later despite exposure to bacteria for only 24 h. Both oral bacteria caused keratinocyte apoptosis at the wound site with cell death being greatest at the wound edge. P. gingivalis and F. nucleatum adversely affected cell proliferation and the effect also had a spatial component being most striking at the edge. The impact of the bacteria was long lasting even when exposure was brief. Cell migration was compromised in bacteria challenged keratinocytes with P. gingivalis having more severe effect (p<0.05) than F. nucleatum. Quantitative real time PCR of bacteria challenged cells showed that P. gingivalis and to a lesser extent F. nucleatum significantly downregulated cell cycle genes cyclin1, CDK1, and CDK4 (p<0.05) that are critical for GI/S transition. Further, genes associated with cell migration such as integrin beta-3 and -6 were significantly downregulated by P. gingivalis (p<0.05).
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spelling pubmed-39318352014-02-25 Effect of Bacteria on the Wound Healing Behavior of Oral Epithelial Cells Bhattacharya, Rupa Xu, Fanxing Dong, Guangyu Li, Shuai Tian, Chen Ponugoti, Bhaskar Graves, Dana T. PLoS One Research Article Wounded tissue offers opportunity to microflora to adhere, colonize, invade and infect surrounding healthy tissue. The bacteria of the oral cavity have the potential to alter the wound healing process by interacting with keratinocytes. The aim of this study was to investigate mechanisms through which oral bacteria may influence re-epithelialization by interacting with gingival keratinocytes. By an in vitro scratch assay we demonstrate that primary gingival keratinocytes have impaired closure when exposed to two well characterized oral bacteria, P. gingivalis, and to a lesser extent, F. nucleatum. P. gingivalis reduced wound closure by ∼40%, which was partially dependent on proteolytic activity, and bacteria was still present within infected cells 9 days later despite exposure to bacteria for only 24 h. Both oral bacteria caused keratinocyte apoptosis at the wound site with cell death being greatest at the wound edge. P. gingivalis and F. nucleatum adversely affected cell proliferation and the effect also had a spatial component being most striking at the edge. The impact of the bacteria was long lasting even when exposure was brief. Cell migration was compromised in bacteria challenged keratinocytes with P. gingivalis having more severe effect (p<0.05) than F. nucleatum. Quantitative real time PCR of bacteria challenged cells showed that P. gingivalis and to a lesser extent F. nucleatum significantly downregulated cell cycle genes cyclin1, CDK1, and CDK4 (p<0.05) that are critical for GI/S transition. Further, genes associated with cell migration such as integrin beta-3 and -6 were significantly downregulated by P. gingivalis (p<0.05). Public Library of Science 2014-02-21 /pmc/articles/PMC3931835/ /pubmed/24586806 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0089475 Text en © 2014 Bhattacharya et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bhattacharya, Rupa
Xu, Fanxing
Dong, Guangyu
Li, Shuai
Tian, Chen
Ponugoti, Bhaskar
Graves, Dana T.
Effect of Bacteria on the Wound Healing Behavior of Oral Epithelial Cells
title Effect of Bacteria on the Wound Healing Behavior of Oral Epithelial Cells
title_full Effect of Bacteria on the Wound Healing Behavior of Oral Epithelial Cells
title_fullStr Effect of Bacteria on the Wound Healing Behavior of Oral Epithelial Cells
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Bacteria on the Wound Healing Behavior of Oral Epithelial Cells
title_short Effect of Bacteria on the Wound Healing Behavior of Oral Epithelial Cells
title_sort effect of bacteria on the wound healing behavior of oral epithelial cells
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3931835/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24586806
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0089475
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