The high sensitivity and specificity of salivary IL-1β and PGE2 in identifying periodontitis suggest a potential use as biomarkers for diagnosis of periodontitis presence and severity.
Periodontitis induces an increase in the output of proteins, including mucin and amylase, thereby enhancing the protective potential of saliva, but this is accompanied by a decrease in flow rate.
The increment of mucin and amylase output in relation to periodontal status indicates that salivary glands respond to the disease by increasing the protective potential of saliva when necessary and return to the normal rate of secretion after the resolution of the inflammatory process.
Cytoskeletal F-actin associated with synaptic vesicles and granules plays an important role during Ca(2+)-mediated exocytosis. In the present work, we have used amperometry and confocal fluorescence to study the role of internal Ca(2+) in the rearrangement of F-actin (visualised with phalloidin-Alexa 546) during exocytosis in rat mast cells. The F-actin-depolymerising drug, latrunculin A, and the ryanodine receptor agonists ryanodine and caffeine that, per se did not induce exocytosis, enhanced the exocytotic responses elicited by compound 48/80 (C48/80). They also induced cortical actin depolymerisation in the presence or absence of external Ca(2+). Degranulation induced by C48/80 was accompanied by the formation of a cytoplasmic F-actin network. Depletion of internal Ca(2+) with cyclopiazonic acid inhibited latrunculin potentiation of C48/80-stimulated exocytosis and completely blocked the formation of the cytoplasmic F-actin network. This indicates that the mobilisation of Ca(2+) from ryanodine-sensitive intracellular stores plays an important role in the depolymerisation of the cortical F-actin barrier and possibly in the formation of the internal F-actin network during exocytotic activation of peritoneal mast cells.
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