Probing the salivary proteome for prognostic biomarkers in response to non‐surgical periodontal therapy

Author:

Silbereisen Angelika1ORCID,Bao Kai1ORCID,Wolski Witold2,Nanni Paolo2,Kunz Laura2,Afacan Beral3,Emingil Gülnur4,Bostanci Nagihan1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Oral Health and Periodontology, Department of Dental Medicine Karolinska Institutet Stockholm Sweden

2. Functional Genomics Center Zurich ETH Zurich and University of Zurich Zurich Switzerland

3. Department of Periodontology, Faculty of Dentistry Adnan Menderes University Aydın Turkey

4. Department of Periodontology, School of Dentistry Ege University İzmir Turkey

Abstract

AbstractAimThis prospective study investigated the salivary proteome before and after periodontal therapy.Materials and MethodsTen systemically healthy, non‐smoking, stage III, grade C periodontitis patients underwent non‐surgical periodontal treatment. Full‐mouth periodontal parameters were measured, and saliva (n = 30) collected pre‐ (T0), and one (T1) and six (T6) months post‐treatment. The proteome was investigated by label‐free quantitative proteomics. Protein expression changes were modelled over time, with significant protein regulation considered at false discovery rate <0.05.ResultsTreatment significantly reduced bleeding scores, percentages of sites with pocket depth ≥5 mm, plaque and gingival indexes. One thousand seven hundred and thirteen proteins were identified and 838 proteins (human = 757, bacterial = 81) quantified (≥2 peptides). At T1, 80 (T1 vs. T0: 60↑:20↓), and at T6, 118 human proteins (T6 vs. T0: 67↑:51↓) were regulated. The salivary proteome at T6 versus T1 remained stable. Highest protein activity post‐ versus pre‐treatment was observed for cellular movement and inflammatory response. The small proline‐rich protein 3 (T1 vs. T0: 5.4‐fold↑) and lymphocyte‐specific protein 1 (T6 vs. T0: 4.6‐fold↓) were the top regulated human proteins. Proteins from Neisseria mucosa and Treponema socranskii (T1 vs. T0: 8.0‐fold↓, 4.9‐fold↓) were down‐regulated.ConclusionsPeriodontal treatment reduced clinical disease parameters and these changes were reflected in the salivary proteome. This underscores the potential of utilizing saliva biomarkers as prognostic tools for monitoring treatment outcomes.

Funder

Vetenskapsrådet

Sveriges Ornitologiska Förening

Publisher

Wiley

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