Do Oral Bacteria from Tooth Infections Worsen Diabetes Risk?
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Do Oral Bacteria from Tooth Infections Worsen Diabetes Risk?


A closer look at IL-17–driven inflammation connecting periapical disease to glucose intolerance

New study examines the oral pathogen Porphyromonas gingivalis (Pg) and suggests its influence may extend beyond dental tissues. Researchers investigated whether Pg-driven periapical lesions, localized dental issues, can trigger wider metabolic disturbances through an IL-17–intense inflammatory response. Using sham-controlled mouse models without oral colonization, the researchers compared mice with and without Pg colonization to assess how IL-17 drives both tissue damage and impaired glucose regulation. The study examines whether chronic periapical infections subtly shape metabolic health and whether targeting IL-17 could offer unexpected systemic benefits.

Chronic inflammatory diseases are increasingly recognized as being tied to systemic metabolic dysfunction, overturning the old belief that local infections stay confined. Research now shows that inflammation arising in a single site like the gums or the root of a tooth can send systemic signals that disrupt glucose regulation. Oral diseases, once dismissed as dental issues, have become central to this evolving picture. Among the key culprits is Porphyromonas gingivalis (Pg), a pathogen behind gum disease and periapical lesions. With its atypical lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and strong inflammatory drive, Pg has emerged as a notable link between persistent oral inflammation and broader metabolic imbalance.

To investigate this possibility, Pr. Vincent Blasco-Baque and his research team at INSERM/Université de Toulouse conducted a comprehensive study, recently published in Volume 17 of the International Journal of Oral Science on 13 November 2025. Their goal was to determine whether Pg-driven periapical lesions could influence systemic metabolism through IL-17–mediated inflammation. Building on earlier findings linking gut bacteria and LPS to metabolic disease, the team sought to uncover whether similar mechanisms could originate from the oral cavity, specifically from endodontic infections.

The researchers first analyzed periapical tissues from 94 endodontic surgery patients and found Pg to be a predominant pathogen, particularly in severe lesions. Vincent Blasco-Baque explains “To test causation and mechanism, we developed a controlled mouse model in which the endodontic space was monocolonized with Pg. Mice were placed on a high-fat diet to simulate metabolic stress and were assigned to receive either wild-type Pg with intact LPS, a weakened LPS strain, or purified LPS alone.” An additional group lacked IL-17 to determine its role in disease progression. Across all groups, the team evaluated periapical bone loss with micro-CT, profiled immune activation, and assessed adipose inflammation, dysbiosis, and glucose metabolism.

These findings reveal a clear mechanistic link between Pg-induced periapical disease and systemic metabolic dysfunction. As Vincent Blasco-Baque shares, “Mice exposed to Pg with functional LPS showed marked periapical bone loss and a surge in Th17 cells and IL-17.” He further notes, “These effects extended systemically: in high-fat–diet mice, Pg-LPS significantly worsened glucose intolerance, accompanied by adipose dysbiosis, inflammation, and cytokines that disrupt insulin signaling.” In IL-17 knockout mice, however, this cascade largely disappeared. Pg or its LPS failed to induce substantial bone loss, metabolic impairment, or inflammatory activation. Without IL-17, Pg lost much of its capacity to drive local and systemic pathology.

This study offers several key benefits and insights. It highlights a previously underrecognized role of periapical lesions in influencing systemic metabolic health. It also establishes a robust causal model rather than solely correlational evidence. Finally, it identifies IL-17 as a potential therapeutic target, suggesting that modulating Th17 activation or blocking Pg virulence factors, such as gingipains or O-antigen LPS components, may reduce both local tissue destruction and systemic metabolic risk.

Looking ahead, these findings open opportunities for novel interventions, including IL-17 inhibitors, gingipain blockers, microbiome-modulating approaches, and improved diagnostic biomarkers to assess systemic impact of endodontic infections.” shares Vincent Blasco-Baque. Further research into synergistic interactions with other oral pathogens may also deepen understanding of oral-systemic disease links.

In conclusion, this study demonstrates that Pg and its LPS are potent drivers of both periapical bone destruction and systemic metabolic dysfunction, acting through an IL-17–dependent inflammatory pathway. By unveiling an oral–systemic axis connecting endodontic infection to metabolic disease, the work lays the foundation for new therapeutic strategies aimed at protecting both oral and systemic health.

About Vincent Blasco-Baque from INSERM/Université de Toulouse/CHU of Toulouse
Vincent Blasco-Baque is a Professeur des Universités–Hospitalier at the Université de Toulouse, where he leads the InCOMM team at the Institut des Maladies Métaboliques et Cardiovasculaires in INSERM. He holds a DMD in Dental Surgery and a PhD in Biology/Physiopathology. With more than a decade of research experience and over 80 scientific publications, his work integrates clinical studies with fundamental biological research. His studies focus on the oral and intestinal microbiota, particularly their involvement in cardiometabolic diseases, inflammation, and periodontitis. He has also coordinated large-scale multi-omics human cohorts and developed gnotobiotic mouse models to investigate causal microbe–host interactions.

Funding information
This study was supported by the Paul Calas Award from the French Society of Endodontics (SFE). The funding body had no role in the study design, data collection, analysis, interpretation, or manuscript writing. Except that, we have not received any funding, grants, or personal benefits from any organization that could affect the objectivity of this study.
Reference
Title of original paper: Porphyromonas gingivalis-induced glucose intolerance during periapical lesions requires its LPS throught a Th17 immune response
Journal: International Journal of Oral Science
DOI: 10.1038/s41368-025-00403-6

Angehängte Dokumente
  • Schematic overview showing how Porphyromonas gingivalis (Pg) with intact LPS drives periapical bone loss and systemic glucose intolerance through IL-17–mediated inflammation. Pg colonization in teeth induces immune cell infiltration (CD45, CD19, Th17) and adipose tissue inflammation, worsening glucose metabolism in high-fat diet mice. These effects are reduced in mice infected with LPS-deficient Pg or lacking IL-17, highlighting IL-17’s key role in linking oral infection to metabolic dysfunction.
Regions: Asia, India, North America, United States
Keywords: Science, People in science, Public Dialogue - science, Health, Medical, People in health research, Public Dialogue - health

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