Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Neurobiol Aging. 2022 Dec;120:88-104. doi: 10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2022.08.014. Epub 2022 Sep 2.
Biological sex is a factor in many conditions, including aging, neurodegenerative disease, cancer, and more. For each of these, men and women display distinct differences in disease development and progression. To date, studies on the molecular basis of such differences have largely focused on sex hormones, typically highlighting their neuroprotective benefits. However, new research suggests that cellular senescence may underlie sex differences in both neurological and non-neurological pathologies. Cellular senescence-stable proliferative arrest with a unique pro-inflammatory phenotype-occurs in response to persistent DNA damage signaling, safeguarding against tissue-level consequences of DNA damage (e.g., tumorigenesis). Though critical for maintaining tissue health, senescence has also been implicated in disease. Indeed, senescent cell accumulation occurs in multiple disease contexts, and the elimination of such cells (via senolytic therapies) alleviates associated disease hallmarks. If cell senescence is a driver of pathophysiology, sex differences in cellular senescence may underlie sex-specific disease outcomes. This review summarizes evidence of sex differences in cellular senescence-highlighting findings from both human and animal studies-and briefly discusses the potential relevance of sex chromosome epigenetics and mosaicism. Current studies show that female sex is associated with greater susceptibility to DNA damage and greater likelihood of senescence onset, despite additional evidence that estrogen protects against genotoxic insult and inhibits senescence regulatory proteins. Further studies on sex differences in cellular senescence are needed, both to verify whether findings from animal studies hold true in human contexts and to validate whether senescence manifests differently between men and women following comparable senescence-inducing stimuli.
生物性别是许多疾病的一个影响因素,包括衰老、神经退行性疾病、癌症等。对于这些疾病中的每一种,男性和女性在疾病的发展和进展方面都表现出明显的差异。迄今为止,关于这些差异的分子基础的研究主要集中在性激素上,通常强调其神经保护作用。然而,新的研究表明,细胞衰老可能是神经和非神经病理学中性别差异的基础。细胞衰老——一种具有独特促炎表型的稳定增殖性停滞——是对持续的 DNA 损伤信号的反应,从而防止 DNA 损伤(如肿瘤发生)对组织水平的影响。尽管细胞衰老对维持组织健康至关重要,但它也与疾病有关。事实上,衰老细胞在多种疾病环境中积累,消除这些细胞(通过衰老细胞清除疗法)可以缓解相关疾病的特征。如果细胞衰老驱动了病理生理学,那么细胞衰老的性别差异可能是导致性别特异性疾病结果的原因。本综述总结了细胞衰老中的性别差异证据——强调了来自人类和动物研究的发现——并简要讨论了性染色体表观遗传学和镶嵌现象的潜在相关性。目前的研究表明,尽管有额外的证据表明雌激素可以抵抗遗传毒性损伤并抑制衰老调节蛋白,但女性的性别更容易受到 DNA 损伤的影响,也更有可能发生衰老。还需要进一步研究细胞衰老中的性别差异,以验证动物研究中的发现是否适用于人类背景,并验证在经历类似的衰老诱导刺激后,男性和女性之间的衰老是否表现出不同。