Molecular Metabolism & Aging Laboratory, Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
School of Health Sciences, University of Tasmania, Launceston, Tasmania, Australia.
Br J Pharmacol. 2019 Nov;176(21):4193-4207. doi: 10.1111/bph.14642. Epub 2019 Apr 21.
Men and women have many differing biological and physiological characteristics. Thus, it is no surprise that the control of metabolic processes and the mechanisms underlying metabolic-related diseases have sex-specific components. There is a clear metabolic sexual dimorphism in that up until midlife, men have a far greater likelihood of acquiring cardio-metabolic disease than women. Following menopause, however, this difference is reduced, suggestive of a protective role of the female sex hormones. Inflammatory processes have been implicated in the pathogenesis of cardio-metabolic disease with human studies correlating metabolic disease acquisition or risk with levels of various inflammatory markers. Rodent studies employing genetic modifications or novel pharmacological approaches have provided mechanistic insight into the role of these inflammatory mediators. Sex differences impact inflammatory processes and the subsequent biological response. As a consequence, this may affect how inflammation alters metabolic processes between the sexes. Recently, some of our work in the field of inflammatory genes and metabolic control identified a sexual dimorphism in a preclinical model and caused us to question the frequency and scale of such findings in the literature. This review concentrates on inflammatory-related signalling in relation to obesity, insulin resistance, and type 2 diabetes and highlights the differences observed between males and females. Differences in the activation and signalling of various inflammatory genes and proteins present another reason why studying both male and female patients or animals is important in the context of understanding and finding therapeutics for metabolic-related disease. LINKED ARTICLES: This article is part of a themed section on The Importance of Sex Differences in Pharmacology Research. To view the other articles in this section visit http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/bph.v176.21/issuetoc.
男性和女性有许多不同的生物学和生理学特征。因此,代谢过程的控制和代谢相关疾病的机制具有性别特异性也就不足为奇了。存在明显的代谢性别二态性,即在中年之前,男性比女性更容易患上代谢性心血管疾病。然而,绝经后,这种差异减小,表明女性性激素具有保护作用。炎症过程与代谢性心血管疾病的发病机制有关,人类研究将代谢性疾病的发生或风险与各种炎症标志物的水平相关联。利用遗传修饰或新型药理学方法的啮齿动物研究为这些炎症介质的作用提供了机制上的见解。性别差异影响炎症过程和随后的生物学反应。因此,这可能会影响炎症如何改变两性之间的代谢过程。最近,我们在炎症基因和代谢控制领域的一些工作在临床前模型中发现了性别二态性,并促使我们质疑在文献中发现此类发现的频率和规模。本综述集中讨论了与肥胖、胰岛素抵抗和 2 型糖尿病相关的炎症相关信号,强调了在男性和女性之间观察到的差异。各种炎症基因和蛋白质的激活和信号转导的差异也说明了为什么在理解和寻找代谢相关疾病的治疗方法的背景下,研究男性和女性患者或动物非常重要。
本文是关于药理学研究中性别差异重要性的专题部分的一部分。要查看本节中的其他文章,请访问 http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/bph.v176.21/issuetoc。