Men and women display distinct extracellular vesicle biomarker signatures in response to military operational stress.

男性和女性在应对军事作战压力时表现出不同的细胞外囊泡生物标志物特征

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作者:Conkright William R, Beckner Meaghan E, Sahu Amrita, Mi Qi, Clemens Zachary J, Lovalekar Mita, Flanagan Shawn D, Martin Brian J, Ferrarelli Fabio, Ambrosio Fabrisia, Nindl Bradley C
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are mediators of physiological changes that occur during physical exertion. This study examined the effects of physical exertion with and without sleep and caloric restriction on EV size, concentration, and surface proteins in men and women. Twenty participants (10 men) completed a 5-day simulated military operational stress protocol with daily physical exertion. Blood was drawn before and immediately after exertion at baseline (D1) and following 48-h of sleep and caloric restriction (D3). EV size and concentration were assessed using nanoparticle tracking analysis. EVs were identified with markers associated with exosomes (CD63), microvesicles (VAMP3), apoptotic bodies (THSD1), and skeletal muscle-derived EVs (SGCA) and quantified using imaging flow cytometry. Interactive and main effects of sex, day, and time on EVs were assessed using three-way ANOVAs. EV concentration declined pre to postexertion in women on D1 and D3 but was stable in men. EV size increased from pre to postexertion and from D1 to D3 in men and women. Physical exertion following sleep and caloric restriction increased CD63+ EV concentration, proportion of total EVs, and CD63 surface protein expression regardless of sex. The proportion of SGCA+ EVs increased in men and women following exertion and from D1 to D3 but was higher in women than in men. No differences were observed in VAMP3+ and THSD1+ EVs. This study identified sexually dimorphic EV profiles in response to various stressors. Further investigations are necessary to determine if dimorphic EV responses affect health and performance outcomes during stress.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Sex is understudied in EV research, and most studies limit EV analysis to single stress conditions such as exercise. Multistress conditions consisting of physical exertion and sleep and caloric restriction are common in real-world settings. We demonstrate that physical exertion results in sex-specific EV signatures and that EV profiles vary according to single versus multistress conditions. Our data highlight important biological and ecological characteristics that should be considered in EV research.

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