Saint Louis University School of Medicine, Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Saint Louis University School of Medicine, Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Virology. 2018 Jan 15;514:66-78. doi: 10.1016/j.virol.2017.10.015. Epub 2017 Nov 10.
Recently, increasing attention has been focused on the influence of sex on the course of infectious diseases. Thus far, the best-documented examples point toward an immune-mediated mechanism: the generally stronger immune response in females can result in a faster clearance of the pathogen or, conversely, a more severe immune-mediated pathology. Here, we report that human species C adenoviruses replicate more and cause more pathology in male Syrian hamsters than in females. We also show that this sex disparity is not caused by a stronger immune response to the infection by the female hamsters. Rather, the liver of male hamsters is more susceptible to adenovirus infection: after intravenous injection, more hepatocytes become infected in male animals than in females. We hypothesize that Kupffer cells (hepatic tissue macrophages) of female animals are more active in sequestering circulating virions, and thus protect hepatocytes more efficiently than those of males.
最近,人们越来越关注性别对传染病病程的影响。到目前为止,有记载的最好的例子指向一个免疫介导的机制:女性通常更强的免疫反应可以导致病原体更快地清除,或者相反,更严重的免疫介导的病理。在这里,我们报告人类 C 型腺病毒在雄性叙利亚仓鼠中的复制更多,引起的病理变化也更严重,而不是在雌性仓鼠中。我们还表明,这种性别差异不是由雌性仓鼠对感染的更强免疫反应引起的。相反,雄性仓鼠的肝脏更容易受到腺病毒感染:静脉注射后,雄性动物中感染的肝细胞比雌性动物多。我们假设雌性动物的枯否细胞(肝组织巨噬细胞)更活跃地隔离循环中的病毒颗粒,因此比雄性动物更有效地保护肝细胞。