A seminal experiment involving a germ-free rat model of connective tissue breakdown (followed soon thereafter by a series of in vitro studies) identified an unexpected non-antimicrobial property of tetracyclines (TCs). This ability of TCs to inhibit matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) such as collagenase was found to reflect multiple direct and indirect mechanisms of action, and to be therapeutically useful in a variety of dental (e.g., adult periodontitis) and medical (e.g., arthritis, osteoporosis, cancer) diseases. The site on the TC molecule responsible for its MMP-inhibitory activity was identified which led to the development of a series of chemically modified non-antimicrobial analogs, called CMTs, which also have therapeutic potential but do not appear to induce antibiotic side-effects. Longitudinal double-blind studies on humans with adult periodontitis have demonstrated that a sub-antimicrobial dose of doxycycline (previously reported to suppress collagenase activity in the periodontal pocket) is safe and effective and has recently been approved by the FDA as an adjunct to scaling and root planing.
This is the first demonstration in human subjects of the simultaneous reduction of excessive MMP activity with concomitant reduction in levels of collagen degradation fragments. The findings are potentially applicable to a wide variety of human diseases characterized by excessive collagenase activity.
Doxycycline administered at subantimicrobial doses led to improvements in disease parameters, with no apparent side effects, and appears to have significant potential as an oral adjunctive therapy in the long-term management of adult periodontitis.
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