W. Harry Feinstone Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America.
Department of Molecular and Comparative Pathobiology, The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America.
PLoS Pathog. 2020 Jul 9;16(7):e1008506. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1008506. eCollection 2020 Jul.
Circulating androgens can modulate immune cell activity, but the impact of androgens on viral pathogenesis remains unclear. Previous data demonstrate that testosterone reduces the severity of influenza A virus (IAV) infection in male mice by mitigating pulmonary inflammation rather than by affecting viral replication. To examine the immune responses mediated by testosterone to mitigate IAV-induced inflammation, adult male mice remained gonadally intact or were gonadectomized and treated with either placebo or androgen-filled (i.e., testosterone or dihydrotestosterone) capsules prior to sublethal IAV infection. Like intact males, treatment of gonadectomized males with androgens improved the outcome of IAV infection, which was not mediated by changes in the control of virus replication or pulmonary cytokine activity. Instead, androgens accelerated pulmonary leukocyte contraction to limit inflammation. To identify which immune cells were contracting in response to androgens, the composition of pulmonary cellular infiltrates was analyzed and revealed that androgens specifically accelerated the contraction of total pulmonary inflammatory monocytes during peak disease, as well as CD8+ T cells, IAV-specific CD8+ T numbers, cytokine production and degranulation by IAV-specific CD8+ T cells, and the influx of eosinophils into the lungs following clearance of IAV. Neither depletion of eosinophils nor adoptive transfer of CD8+ T cells could reverse the ability of testosterone to protect males against IAV suggesting these were secondary immunologic effects. The effects of testosterone on the contraction of immune cell numbers and activity were blocked by co-administration of the androgen receptor antagonist flutamide and mimicked by treatment with dihydrotestosterone, which was also able to reduce the severity of IAV in female mice. These data suggest that androgen receptor signaling creates a local pulmonary environment that promotes downregulation of detrimental inflammatory immune responses to protect against prolonged influenza disease.
循环雄激素可调节免疫细胞的活性,但雄激素对病毒发病机制的影响尚不清楚。先前的数据表明,睾丸酮通过减轻肺部炎症而不是影响病毒复制,从而降低雄性小鼠感染甲型流感病毒(IAV)的严重程度。为了研究睾丸酮介导的免疫反应减轻 IAV 诱导的炎症的机制,成年雄性小鼠保持性腺完整,或进行性腺切除术,并在亚致死性 IAV 感染前用安慰剂或雄激素填充(即睾丸酮或二氢睾丸酮)胶囊治疗。与完整的雄性小鼠一样,雄激素治疗去势雄性小鼠可改善 IAV 感染的结果,这不是通过改变对病毒复制或肺部细胞因子活性的控制来介导的。相反,雄激素加速了肺部白细胞的收缩,以限制炎症。为了确定哪些免疫细胞对雄激素有反应,分析了肺部细胞浸润的组成,结果表明,雄激素特异性地加速了总肺部炎性单核细胞在疾病高峰期的收缩,还加速了 CD8+T 细胞、IAV 特异性 CD8+T 细胞数量、细胞因子产生和 IAV 特异性 CD8+T 细胞脱颗粒,以及在清除 IAV 后嗜酸性粒细胞涌入肺部。嗜酸性粒细胞耗竭或 CD8+T 细胞过继转移均不能逆转睾丸酮保护雄性小鼠免受 IAV 的能力,这表明这是继发的免疫效应。睾丸酮对免疫细胞数量和活性收缩的影响可被雄激素受体拮抗剂氟他胺共同给药阻断,并用二氢睾丸酮模拟,二氢睾丸酮也能够降低雌性小鼠 IAV 的严重程度。这些数据表明,雄激素受体信号产生了一个局部肺部环境,促进下调有害的炎症免疫反应,以防止流感的长期发病。