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Infection and Immunity, September 2003, p. 4917-4924, Vol. 71, No. 9
0019-9567/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.71.9.4917-4924.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology, Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Boston University,1 Cardiovascular Research Center, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School,2 Section of Infectious Disease, Department of Medicine,3 Department of Microbiology, Boston University Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts 021184
Received 10 March 2003/ Returned for modification 8 May 2003/ Accepted 17 June 2003
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) and bacterial lipopolysaccharide (40). iNOS releases large amounts of NO in a prolonged fashion, and high local concentrations of NO and its oxidative derivatives such as peroxynitrite (ONOO-) are shown to be toxic to eukaryotic cells, as well as to microbes (18, 39). In addition, NO also plays an immunomodulatory role by regulating leukocyte migration and inhibiting superoxide production (30, 33). Experiments with knockout mice lacking iNOS (iNOS-/- mice) indicated increased susceptibility to Leishmania major, Toxoplasma gondii, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and Salmonella infections, suggesting a protective effect of iNOS-derived NO against these microorganisms (32, 35, 53). Similarly, pharmacological inhibition of NO synthesis in wild-type (WT) mice led to an increased bacterial burden during experimental tuberculosis and leishmaniasis, further supporting the idea that NO plays a role in a patent host response to infection (36, 50). On the other hand, in various sterile experimental inflammation models, including adjuvant arthritis (22), chronic experimental ileitis (37), and carrageenin-induced paw inflammation (21), NO appeared to be detrimental to host tissues. Moreover, NO is not always protective against infectious agents, since Karupiah et al. demonstrated that iNOS-/- mice were protected from influenza A virus-induced pneumonia at titers that were lethal in WT mice (26). NO is thus recognized as a molecule with dual effects in host defense, and it has been suggested that host tissue damage is the price to pay for the widespread cellular availability and broad spectrum of target organisms for NO (41).
Numerous microorganisms have been associated with periodontal disease, an infectious disease characterized by destruction of tooth-supporting tissues. Based on epidemiological and experimental data, Porphyromonas gingivalis has emerged as an important causative agent of advanced adult periodontal disease (1, 9, 15, 17). This organism possesses an array of virulence factors that allow for colonization and initiation of periodontal infection, including lipopolysaccharide, fimbriae, hemagglutinins, hemolysins, and proteolytic enzymes such as gingipains (14, 20, 38). P. gingivalis is sufficient to initiate alveolar bone loss in rodents and nonhuman primates (14, 19). P. gingivalis has been shown to induce iNOS expression in gingival fibroblasts, inflammatory cells, and basal keratinocytes (28); to stimulate NO release from macrophages (46); and to induce expression of IFN-
, an important stimulant of NO release (42).
Although periodontal disease is initiated and maintained by a pathogenic oral flora, an overzealous host response is thought to contribute significantly to periodontal tissue destruction. For example, in localized aggressive periodontitis, polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN)-mediated tissue injury contributes significantly to periodontal destruction due to excessive superoxide (O2-) generation by these cells (25). Interestingly, patients with localized aggressive periodontitis also display elevated NOS activity, and inhibition of NO synthesis resulted in increased chemotaxis (48). NO has been demonstrated to mediate inflammation and bone loss in a ligature model of periodontal disease, where pharmacological inhibition of iNOS diminished plasma extravasation and bone destruction (34). However, no experimental data are available on NO's contribution to the host defense against any specific periodontal pathogen.
In the present study we investigated the role of NO in the defense against P. gingivalis by using a subcutaneous chamber model of local infection in WT and iNOS-/- mice (12). We report that NO generated by iNOS is required for control of P. gingivalis infection and that NO may be an important molecule in regulating oxidative killing and PMN survival.
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P. gingivalis culture. P. gingivalis strain A7436 was cultivated as described previously (12, 14). After 24 h of anaerobic growth in Schaedler broth (Difco, Detroit, Mich.), the bacteria were harvested by centrifugation, washed with sterile pyrogen-free saline (PFS) and adjusted to an optical density at 660 nm of 1.0 (ca. 109 CFU/ml). Bacterial cell counts were determined on all bacterial cultures to confirm P. gingivalis viability prior to mouse experiments.
Subcutaneous chamber inoculation with P. gingivalis. Sterile coil-shaped chambers prepared from stainless steel wire were inserted subcutaneously to the subscapular region of WT and iNOS-/- mice under isoflurane anesthesia as described previously (12). Both WT and iNOS-/- mice were divided into two groups each (P. gingivalis, or mock treated), at 10 animals/group (for a total of 40 mice), and baseline serum samples were collected from each mouse and stored at -80°C for enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs). After 10 days of rest, subcutaneous chambers from one group of WT mice and one group of iNOS-/- mice were injected with 0.1 ml of P. gingivalis suspended in PFS (109 CFU/ml), whereas the second groups of WT and iNOS-/- mice were injected with vehicle only.
For cachexia, skin abscess formation, and chamber rejection a score was given on a scale from 0 to 4, where 0 represents normal appearance, and 4 indicates the most severe lesion (e.g., complete chamber rejection). Scoring was performed by an examiner who was blinded to the identity of treatment groups. A minimum of 55 µl of chamber fluid was collected from each mouse at 1, 3, 7, and 11 days postchallenge. These fluids were separated as follows: 10 µl for determination of P. gingivalis viability (CFU/ml), 10 µl for total inflammatory cell counts, 5 µl for differential inflammatory cell counts, 10 µl for fluorescent microscopic analysis of chamber fluids, and 20 µl for determination of cytokines (tumor necrosis factor alpha [TNF-
], interleukin-1ß [IL-1ß] and IL-6) and prostaglandin E2 [PGE2] by ELISA. After 11 days, a final serum sample was obtained from all mice; each sample was stored frozen at -80°C, and then all mice were humanely sacrificed.
Determination of viable P. gingivalis from murine chamber fluids. Titers of viable P. gingivalis in chamber fluids were determined as described previously (12). Briefly, the 10-µl aliquot of chamber fluid from each mouse was serially 10-fold diluted with 1% peptone, the dilutions were plated onto anaerobic blood agar plates in duplicate and incubated anaerobically for 5 to 7 days, and the CFU counts of P. gingivalis/milliliter present in each chamber fluid were determined.
Determination of P. gingivalis-specific IgG by ELISA. P. gingivalis-specific immunoglobulin G (IgG) levels were determined by ELISA as follows. Broth-grown P. gingivalis was fixed overnight with 3% formaldehyde, washed, and adjusted to an optical density at 660 nm of 0.3 in carbonate-bicarbonate buffer (pH 9.6). A 50-µl aliquot of this suspension was added to each well of 96-well Immulon 4HBx ELISA plates (Dynatec, Chantilly, Va.). After overnight incubation, the plates were dried and blocked with bovine serum albumin (2%), and serial twofold dilutions of each chamber fluid sample in phosphate-buffered saline plus 0.05% Tween 20 were added to the wells, followed by incubation overnight. The plates were washed, incubated with a goat anti-mouse IgG-alkaline phosphatase conjugate (1:7,500 dilution; Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.), substrate was added, and after 1 h of incubation the absorbance was read at 405 nm. We also included one additional ELISA plate to perform quantitative assessments of murine IgG levels in serum. This plate was sensitized with 200 ng of rabbit anti-mouse IgG Fab fragment and blocked with bovine serum albumin, and quintuplicate wells were incubated with a serial twofold dilution of a mouse IgG standard (Sigma) ranging from 200 ng to 0.1 pg/ml. This plate was processed with the mouse chamber fluid samples, and the standard curve generated from this plate was used to calculate the concentration of P. gingivalis-specific IgG present in all chamber fluids.
Analysis of chamber fluid for P. gingivalis-host cell interactions. A fluorescence phagocytosis and killing assay, as modified by Cutler et al. (8), was used to assess P. gingivalis and host cell viability and interactions. In brief, 10-µl aliquots of chamber fluids from each mouse were diluted 1:10 in PFS, centrifuged to collect leukocytes and bacteria, and stained with propidium iodide (final concentration, 5 µg/ml), DAPI (4',6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole; 15 µg/ml), and acridine orange (20 ng/ml). After being stained, the cells were attached to microscope slides by using a cytospin apparatus, a drop of cyanoacrylate was added to each slide, and a coverslip was attached. All samples were analyzed by epi-illumination UV microscopy. PMNs were differentiated by lobed nuclei and by a granular cytoplasm when stained with acridine orange. Dead PMNs were differentiated from live PMNs by their red staining with propidium iodide. A total of 100 cells were counted from each slide and the percentage of live and dead PMNs present in the chamber fluids were calculated for each mouse.
TNF-
, IL-1ß, IL-6, and PGE2 determinations.
The 20-µl aliquots of chamber fluid samples obtained from experimental mice were diluted 1:50 with PFS, and the levels of TNF-
, IL-1ß, IL-6, and PGE2 were determined by using commercially available ELISA kits according to the manufacturer's instructions (R&D Systems, Minneapolis, Minn.). Intra-assay standards were used to calculate the concentration of each molecule present in the undiluted chamber fluids.
Superoxide release by isolated neutrophils. Leukocytes were obtained by abdominal lavage from WT and iNOS-/- mice after casein stimulation (7), and PMNs were isolated by discontinuous density gradient centrifugation with Histopaque 1119 and 1077 (Sigma). Superoxide production was determined from purified mouse PMNs after P. gingivalis challenge by using the cytochrome c reduction assay (47). Briefly, WT and iNOS-/- PMNs were placed into microtiter plates and were either unstimulated or were stimulated with P. gingivalis (multiplicity of infection = 100) or fMLP (N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine; Sigma) at 1 µM as a positive control stimulus in the presence or absence of superoxide dismutase (SOD). Superoxide production was monitored over a 10-min period at an absorbance of 550 nm with a microplate reader. The amount of SOD-inhibitable superoxide generated was calculated from raw optical density units and converted into nanomole production per minute.
Statistical analysis. Viable P. gingivalis cell counts, cytokine levels, and superoxide generation were compared by using analysis of variance (ANOVA) with the Fisher protected-least-significant-difference test for individual comparisons. Comparison of live PMN counts between mouse strains was performed by using a Student t test. For all statistical calculations, StatView 5.0.1 software was used (SAS, Inc., Cary, N.C.), and a P value of <0.05 was considered significant.
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FIG. 1. Increased numbers of P. gingivalis were detected in chamber fluids of iNOS-/- mice compared to those of WT mice. Subcutaneous chambers were inoculated on day 0 with 108 CFU of P. gingivalis strain A7436, and aliquots of chamber fluid were collected on days 1, 3, 7, and 11. CFU/milliliter values were determined by bacterial growth on anaerobic blood agar plates (n = 10 mice for each group; , P < 0.01 [ANOVA]).
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TABLE 1. Host response in WT and iNOS-/- mice at 11 days postinjection of P. gingivalis
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FIG. 2. IgG titers in serum against P. gingivalis. There was no detectable anti-P. gingivalis IgG before inoculation (day 0) or in the saline-injected mice of either genotype. After P. gingivalis inoculation, WT and iNOS-/- mice showed increased levels of anti P. gingivalis IgG in serum, as determined by quantitative ELISA on days 7 and 11 after inoculation. No statistical differences were observed in the levels of P. gingivalis-specific IgG in serum between WT and iNOS-/- mice.
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, IL-1ß, and IL-6 present in chamber fluid samples of WT and iNOS-/- mice by ELISA during the initial 3 days after challenge. TNF-
was detected in the chamber fluids of both WT and iNOS-/- mice 1 day after P. gingivalis challenge, and the level of TNF-
increased by day 3. However, there were no significant differences in the levels of TNF-
present in chamber fluid levels from WT or iNOS-/- mice at either day 1 or day 3 postinfection (Fig. 3A). IL-1ß was also detected in chamber fluid samples of WT and iNOS-/- mice 1 day after P. gingivalis infection (Fig. 3B). By day 3, IL-1ß levels markedly decreased in both mouse strains. No significant differences were observed in the levels of IL-1ß between WT and iNOS-/- mice. The levels of IL-6 in chamber fluids were also found to be similar for both WT and iNOS-/- mice at 1 and 3 days after P. gingivalis challenge (Fig. 3C). Chamber fluids from mice not infected with P. gingivalis did not produce detectable amounts of TNF-
, IL-1ß, or IL-6 (data not shown). We also assessed the level of the proinflammatory arachidonic acid metabolite PGE2 by ELISA. We observed that the chamber fluid levels of PGE2 were elevated in both WT and iNOS-/- mice challenged with P. gingivalis. However, the levels of PGE2 detected in chamber fluids from WT and iNOS-/- mice were not significantly different at any time point after P. gingivalis stimulation (Fig. 3D).
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FIG. 3. Cytokine and PGE2 levels in chamber fluids of WT and iNOS-/- mice after P. gingivalis challenge as measured by ELISA. Chambers were inoculated with 108 CFU of P. gingivalis or vehicle on day 0. (A) TNF- levels measured 1 and 3 days postinoculation; (B) IL-1ß levels measured 1 and 3 days postinoculation; (C) IL-6 expression measured 1 and 3 days postinoculation; (D) PGE2 expression measured in vehicle or in P. gingivalis-inoculated chambers 3 days after inoculation. No statistically significant differences in cytokine levels were found between WT and iNOS-/- mice after P. gingivalis challenge.
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FIG. 4. Inflammatory cell infiltrate in the chambers of mice challenged with P. gingivalis. (A) Total white blood cell counts were similar between the two genotypes as determined by Trypan blue staining and cell counting. (B) Differential cell counts demonstrated that the dominant leukocyte type in the infected chambers is the PMN. There were no differences in the proportions of PMNs and mononuclear cells in the chamber fluids of WT and iNOS-/- mice. (C) The ratio of live and dead PMNs in the chamber fluid samples was decreased in iNOS-/- samples at day 3, as determined by counting the number of dead PMNs out of 100 PMNs after propidium iodine staining (n = nine mice for each group; , P < 0.05 [Student t test]).
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FIG. 5. Peak superoxide release by PMNs in response to fMLP (1 µM) or P. gingivalis (multiplicity of infection = 100). O2- was measured by using a cytochrome c reduction assay. Data are expressed as the percent increase over baseline O2- release. P. gingivalis induced significantly greater peak O2- responses in iNOS-/- PMNs compared to WT PMNs (n = five mice for each group; , P < 0.05 [iNOS-/- mice versus WT mice, ANOVA]).
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The humoral immune response to P. gingivalis appears to be intact in iNOS-/- mice, since anti-P. gingivalis IgG levels in serum were similar in WT and iNOS-/- mice. Cytokine activation also appears to be unchanged in the absence of iNOS, since TNF-
, IL-1ß, IL-6, and PGE2 were induced similarly in WT and iNOS-/- chamber fluids in response to P. gingivalis. NO of endothelial origin has been shown to modulate leukocyte attachment to vascular endothelium by downregulating E-selectin and ICAM-1 (30, 33). However, we observed no difference in leukocyte counts in the chambers of WT and iNOS-/- mice, which confirms earlier observations that iNOS-derived NO has no impact on leukocyte migration (35). On the other hand, our data indicate that once leukocytes migrate to the site of infection, iNOS becomes an indispensable part of the host defense, since PMN survival was impaired and O2- release was increased in the absence of iNOS after P. gingivalis challenge.
PMNs are among the first inflammatory cells to be mobilized against bacterial invasion, and phagocytosis coupled by oxidative killing by PMNs is a critical mechanism for the elimination of microorganisms. The role of NO in PMN survival is unclear. Although pharmacological NO donors can induce cell death and apoptosis in isolated PMNs (10, 52), and NO donors can also attenuate the antiapoptotic effect of lipopolysaccharide on PMNs (4), there is evidence that NO's effect on cell death is dose dependent, and sustained release of physiological doses of NO can be cytoprotecive (29, 51). Our finding that PMN cell death is increased in P. gingivalis-challenged iNOS-/- mice lends support to the latter theory by demonstrating that endogenously released NO can be protective to PMNs during bacterial challenge. An alternative explanation is that the increased loss of PMN viability in iNOS-/- mice is a direct consequence of increased bacterial burden and the subsequent increase in the levels of gingipains expressed by P. gingivalis in iNOS-/- chambers. However, the average numbers of bacteria found within a PMN were similar for WT and iNOS-/- samples, suggesting that an inappropriate host response rather than the increased bacterial numbers is responsible for the observed increase in iNOS-/- PMN cell death.
The macroscopic findings of more severe skin abscess and more advanced chamber rejection in iNOS-/- mice coincide with the microscopic observations of increased PMN death. Whether an overactive host response or the increased bacterial burden is the main cause for the skin tissue damage is not known. However, the increase in P. gingivalis titers in iNOS-/- chambers is relatively modest, which suggests that other factors, such as a self-damaging host response, might play a role.
The observed increase in O2- activity in isolated iNOS-/- PMNs might be an important component of the altered host response in the absence of NO. O2- is released by NADPH oxidase, an enzyme complex assembled in the plasma membrane of activated PMNs during respiratory burst. NO interacts with O2- metabolism on at least two levels: direct inhibition of the NADPH oxidase and scavenging free O2- (16, 44). Studies on the direct inhibition of O2- production by NO demonstrate that NO inhibits components of NADPH oxidase before or during their assembly (6, 11, 43). Our observation that there is increased peak release of O2- in iNOS-/- PMNs upon P. gingivalis stimulation thus might be due to the absence of NO-mediated inhibition of NADPH oxidase assembly. In addition, the lack of NO can further enhance O2- effects because NO is an important O2- scavenger (16, 23). It is likely that the available O2- is increased in iNOS-/- chambers, since the differential cell counts show that the dominant leukocyte in the chambers is the PMN, and PMNs isolated from iNOS-/- mice were found to release more O2- than those from WT mice. The increased O2- levels augment oxidative stress for host tissues and might be a key factor in the increases observed in skin lesions and chamber rejection in iNOS-/- mice. PMN-mediated host tissue damage has been demonstrated in numerous diseases, including glomerulonephritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and cystic fibrosis (54). A similar case has been made for localized aggressive periodontitis, where enhanced superoxide release from both stimulated and nonstimulated PMNs has been demonstrated (47). It is interesting that the product of the reaction by NO and O2-, ONOO-, is a strong oxidant itself, capable of causing DNA strand breaks, oxidizing proteins, and nitrating tyrosine residues, resulting in altered protein function (3, 24). Moreover, ONOO- also has antimicrobial activity, e.g., against Helicobacter pylori (31), raising the possibility that diminished levels of ONOO- are contributing to the increase in P. gingivalis organisms in the subcutaneous chambers of iNOS-/- mice.
The primary source of NO in mice is the macrophage, the cell type for which iNOS gene expression was first described (55). In addition, mouse (2), rat (45), and human (5) PMNs have all been demonstrated to release NO upon stimulation. Although NO output from PMNs is generally lower (2 to 20 nmol/min/106 cells) (45), we found that PMNs represent the majority leukocyte cell type in P. gingivalis-inoculated chambers; thus, they are likely to contribute to the overall NO output. Regardless of the source, NO diffuses freely through cell membranes and can act as a paracrine molecule on neighboring cells (27). iNOS-/- cells, on the other hand, express no iNOS mRNA and fail to produce detectable NO upon stimulation with lipopolysaccharide and IFN-
(35).
Our results demonstrate a functional interplay between the NO and O2- systems and indicate that upsetting the balance of these two effector molecules can result in cell and tissue damage. Complementary action between the NO and O2- systems has been elegantly demonstrated by Shiloh et al., who showed that whereas single knockouts deficient in either NO or O2- production are resistant to infections by commensal microorganisms such as Escherichia coli, iNOS/gp91phox double knockouts deficient in both NO and O2- production quickly succumb to infections by endogenous bacteria (49). Future studies with iNOS/gp91phox double-knockout mice will determine whether there is a causal relationship between the excessive O2- production and the increased host tissue damage in iNOS-/- mice.
In conclusion, our results indicate that iNOS-generated NO is an important element of the host defense against the periodontal pathogen P. gingivalis. Neutrophil PMNs require an intact iNOS enzyme for optimal survival, and modulation of O2- effects is likely to be a mechanism by which NO influences neutrophil function.
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