Marketing deregulated expression of anti-apoptotic proteins belonging to the Bcl-2 family in neutrophils as a potential therapy against periodontal disease. In vitro and in vivo analysis. (Q84300): Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Changed an Item: Change because item Q2513967 was merged with Q236061) |
(Changed label, description and/or aliases in fr: translated_label) |
||
label / fr | label / fr | ||
Cibler l’expression dérégulée des protéines antiapoptotiques appartenant à la famille Bcl-2 dans les neutrophiles comme traitement potentiel contre les maladies parodontales. Analyse in vitro et in vivo. |
Revision as of 16:24, 30 November 2021
Project Q84300 in Poland
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Marketing deregulated expression of anti-apoptotic proteins belonging to the Bcl-2 family in neutrophils as a potential therapy against periodontal disease. In vitro and in vivo analysis. |
Project Q84300 in Poland |
Statements
2,000,000.0 zloty
0 references
2,000,000.0 zloty
0 references
100.0 percent
0 references
1 April 2019
0 references
31 March 2022
0 references
UNIWERSYTET JAGIELLOŃSKI
0 references
Chronic periodontal disease(PD) is one of the most frequent inflammatory diseases affecting 11.2% of the world’s population and representing a prominent public health burden. Risk factors for developing PD are cigarette smoking, diabetes, osteoporosis, and infections with periodontal pathogens(i.e. Porphyromonas gingivalis). The pathogenesis of PD is associated with an over-reactive host inflammatory response to P.gingivalis. Current literature implicates hyper-reactive neutrophils as the main immune cell type responsible for the tissue damage and the disease progression. Neutrophils have very short lifespan, controlled by the Bcl-2 family proteins, but it can be significantly prolonged during the infection. Therefore, I hypothesize that hyper-activity and prolonged survival of neutrophils induced by P.gingivalis through the increased expression of pro-survival members of the Bcl-2 family proteins is a novel, yet uncharacterized mechanism strongly contributing to the development of PD. (Polish)
0 references
Chronic periodontal disease(PD) is one of the most frequent inflammatory diseases affecting 11.2 % of the world’s population and representing a prominent public health burden. Risk factors for developing PD are cigarette smoking, diabetes, osteoporosis, and infections with periodontal Pathogens(i.e. Porphyromonas gingivalis). The pathogenesis of PD is associated with an over-reactive host inflammatory response to P.gingivalis. Current literature implicates hyper-reactive neutrophils as the main immune cell type responsible for the tissue damage and the disease progression. Neutrophils have very short LifeSpan, controlled by the Bcl-2 family proteins, but it can be significantly prolonged during the infection. Thus, I hypothesise that hyper-activity and prolonged survival of neutrophils induced by P.gingivalis through the increased expression of pro-survival members of the Bcl-2 family proteins is a novel, yet uncharacterised mechanism strongly contributing to the development of PD. (English)
14 October 2020
0 references
Identifiers
POIR.04.04.00-00-42FE/17
0 references