Lower female survival from an opportunistic infection reveals progesterone-driven sex bias in trained immunity

女性在机会性感染中存活率较低,揭示了孕激素驱动的训练免疫中的性别偏向。

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作者:Alexander P Earhart ,Natalia G Karasseva ,Kathryn M Storey ,Benjamin Olthoff ,Md Bodruzzaman Sarker ,Kimberly G Laffey ,Margaret J Lange ,R Scott Rector ,Laura C Schulz ,Diana Gil ,Claudia M Neuhauser ,Adam G Schrum

Abstract

Immune responses differ between females and males, although such sex-based variance is incompletely understood. Observing that bacteremia of the opportunistic pathogen Burkholderia gladioli caused many more deaths of female than male mice bearing genetic deficiencies in adaptive immunity, we determined that this was associated with sex bias in the innate immune memory response called trained immunity. Female attenuation of trained immunity varies with estrous cycle stage and correlates with serum progesterone, a hormone that decreases glycolytic capacity and recall cytokine secretion induced by antigen non-specific stimuli. Progesterone receptor antagonism rescues female trained immune responses and survival from controlled B. gladioli infection to magnitudes similar to those of males. These data demonstrate progesterone-dependent sex bias in trained immunity where attenuation of female responses is associated with survival outcomes from opportunistic infection. Keywords: Burkholderia gladioli; CP: Immunology; glycolytic capacity; innate immune memory; oppotunistic infection; progesterone; progesterone receptor; sex as a biological variable; sex bias; trained immunity.

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