AUTHOR=Deng Jie , Golub Lorne M. , Lee Hsi-Ming , Bhatt Heta-Dinesh , Hong Hou-Lin , Johnson Francis , Scaduto Joseph , Zimmerman Thomas , Gu Ying TITLE=A Novel Chemically-Modified Curcumin 2.24: Short-Term Systemic Therapy for Natural Periodontitis in Dogs JOURNAL=Frontiers in Dental Medicine VOLUME=Volume 2 - 2021 YEAR=2021 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/dental-medicine/articles/10.3389/fdmed.2021.609795 DOI=10.3389/fdmed.2021.609795 ISSN=2673-4915 ABSTRACT=Periodontitis, a destructive periodontal inflammatory disease, compromises oral-health related quality of life. It's characterized by the generation of inflammatory mediators and the production of collagenolytic tissue-destructive enzymes (especially matrix metalloproteinases, MMPs). Many biomarkers can be used to define/diagnose disease progression. However, there are still critical lack of specific, fast, and reliable, biomarkers that correlate well with early response to treatment, which can be used to predict/monitor disease. Here, we reported that an early marker, MMP-9, was found to be sensitive in response to a 1-month systemic therapy of CMC2.24, a novel chemically-modified curcumin, in beagle dogs with naturally-occurring periodontitis. In brief, eight adult female dogs with generalized periodontitis were distributed into placebo and treatment groups (n=4/group). After a 1-hour full-mouth scaling and root planing at time 0, placebo or CMC2.24 (10mg/kg) capsules were orally-administered once/day for 1-month. Clinical periodontal parameters were measured at time 0 and 1-month; in addition, peripheral blood from these dogs were collected and analyzed for the pro-, activated-, and total-forms of MMP-9 by gelatin zymography. Interestingly, our study found that the 1-month systemic therapy of CMC2.24 did appear to significantly reduce both pro- and activated-MMP-9 in peripheral blood at this early stage compared to placebo, prior to apparent clinical improvements seen at a late stage of previous study (3-months). Therefore, MMP-9 may serve as an early/sensitive biomarker that can precede and predict future clinical changes in disease severity and response to treatment which we observed in the long-term study in this dog model of natural periodontitis.