Intrinsic autoimmune capacities of hematopoietic cells from female New Zealand hybrid mice.
Alexandria David,Abhishek Trigunaite,Megan K. L. MacLeod,Angela C. Johnson,Philippa Marrack,Trine N. Jørgensen +5 more
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TL;DR: It is shown that female hematopoietic cells express an intrinsic capacity to drive lupus-like disease in both male and female recipient mice, suggesting that this capacity is hormone independent.
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Abstract: Most systemic autoimmune diseases occur more frequently in females than in males. This is particularly evident in Sjogren's syndrome, systemic lupus erythromatosis (SLE) and thyroid autoimmunity, where the ratio of females to males ranges from 20:1 to 8:1. Our understanding of the etiology of SLE implies important roles for genetics, environmental factors and sex hormones, but the relative significance of each remains unknown. Using the New Zealand hybrid mouse model system of SLE, we present here a new fetal liver chimera-based system in which we can segregate effects of immune system genes from that of sex hormones in vivo. We show that female hematopoietic cells express an intrinsic capacity to drive lupus-like disease in both male and female recipient mice, suggesting that this capacity is hormone independent. Particularly, only chimeric mice with a female hematopoietic system showed significantly increased numbers of germinal center B cells, memory B cells and plasma cells followed by a spontaneous loss of tolerance to nuclear components and hence elevated serum antinuclear autoantibodies. A protective effect of testosterone was noted with regard to disease onset, but not disease incidence. Thus, genetic factors encoded within the female hematopoietic system can effectively drive lupus-like disease even in male recipients.
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Estrogen receptors regulate innate immune cells and signaling pathways.
TL;DR: Reviewing the recent literature and highlighting several molecular mechanisms by which ERs regulate the development or functional responses of innate immune cells may contribute to the reported sex differences in innate immune pathways.
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Genome-wide association analysis of eosinophilic esophagitis provides insight into the tissue specificity of this allergic disease
Leah C. Kottyan,Leah C. Kottyan,Benjamin P. Davis,Joseph D. Sherrill,Kan Liu,Mark Rochman,Kenneth M. Kaufman,Kenneth M. Kaufman,Matthew T. Weirauch,Samuel E. Vaughn,Sara Lazaro,Sara Lazaro,Andrew M. Rupert,Mojtaba Kohram,Emily M. Stucke,Katherine A. Kemme,Albert F. Magnusen,Albert F. Magnusen,Hua He,Phillip Dexheimer,Mirna Chehade,Robert A. Wood,Robbie D. Pesek,Brian P. Vickery,David Fleischer,Robert Lindbad,Hugh A. Sampson,Vincent A. Mukkada,Phil E. Putnam,J. Pablo Abonia,Lisa J. Martin,John B. Harley,John B. Harley,Marc E. Rothenberg +33 more
TL;DR: A model to explain the tissue-specific nature of EoE that involves the interplay of allergic sensitization with an Eosinophilic esophagitis-specific, IL-13–inducible esophageal response involving CAPN14 is proposed.
When the balance is broken: X-linked gene dosage from two X chromosomes and female-biased autoimmunity
TL;DR: Research describing overexpression of X‐linked immunity‐related genes and female‐biased autoimmunity in both humans and mouse models is highlighted, and connections are made with recent work elucidating lymphocyte‐specific mechanisms of XCI maintenance that become altered in lupus patients.
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Escape from X chromosome inactivation and female bias of autoimmune diseases.
TL;DR: In the present review, the contribution of the escape genes to the female bias of autoimmune diseases will be discussed.
The conneXion between sex and immune responses.
Katherine S. Forsyth,Nikhil Jiwrajka,Claudia D Lovell,Natalie E Toothacre,Montserrat C Anguera +4 more
TL;DR: This work focuses on the genetic and epigenetic contributions responsible for altered X chromosome-linked gene expression, and how this impacts sex-biased immune responses in the context of pathogen infection and systemic autoimmunity.
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Fabienne Mackay,Stephen A. Woodcock,Pornsri Lawton,Christine Ambrose,Manfred Baetscher,Pascal Schneider,Jürg Tschopp,Jeffrey L. Browning +7 more
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