Paediatrics, Academic Centre, Tallaght University Hospital, Trinity College, The University of Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
Trinity Translational Medicine Institute (TTMI) & Trinity Research in Childhood Centre (TRICC), Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
J Matern Fetal Neonatal Med. 2024 Dec;37(1):2334850. doi: 10.1080/14767058.2024.2334850. Epub 2024 Jun 5.
Scientific evidence provides a widened view of differences in immune response between male and female neonates. The X-chromosome codes for several genes important in the innate immune response and neonatal innate immune cells express receptors for, and are inhibited by, maternal sex hormones. We hypothesized that sex differences in innate immune responses may be present in the neonatal population which may contribute to the increased susceptibility of premature males to sepsis. We aimed to examine the effect of pro-inflammatory stimuli and hormones in neutrophils and monocytes of male and female neonates, to examine the expression of X-linked genes involved in innate immunity and the miRNA profiles in these populations.
Preterm infants ( = 21) and term control ( = 19) infants were recruited from the Coombe Women and Infants University Hospital Dublin with ethical approval and explicit consent. The preterm neonates (eight female, 13 male) were recruited with a mean gestation at birth (mean ± SD) of 28 ± 2 weeks and corrected gestation at the time of sampling was 30 + 2.6 weeks. The mean birth weight of preterm neonates was 1084 ± 246 g. Peripheral blood samples were used to analyze immune cell phenotypes, miRNA human panel, and RNA profiles for inflammasome and inflammatory genes.
Dividing neutrophil results by sex showed no differences in baseline CD11b between sexes among either term or preterm neonates. Examining monocyte CD11b by sex shows, that at baseline, total and classical monocytes have higher CD11b in preterm females than preterm males. Neutrophil TLR2 did not differ between sexes at baseline or following lipopolysaccharide (LPS) exposure. CD11b expression was higher in preterm male non-classical monocytes following Pam3CSK treatment when compared to females, a finding which is unique to our study. Preterm neonates had higher TLR2 expression at baseline in total monocytes, classical monocytes and non-classical monocytes than term. A sex difference was evident between preterm females and term females in TLR2 expression only. Hormone treatment showed no sex differences and there was no detectable difference between males and females in X-linked gene expression. Two miRNAs, miR-212-3p and miR-218-2-3p had significantly higher expression in preterm female than preterm male neonates.
This study examined immune cell phenotypes and x-linked gene expression in preterm neonates and stratified according to gender. Our findings suggest that the responses of females mature with advancing gestation, whereas male term and preterm neonates have very similar responses. Female preterm neonates have improved monocyte activation than males, which likely reflects improved innate immune function as reflected clinically by their lower risk of sepsis. Dividing results by sex showed changes in preterm and term infants at baseline and following LPS stimulation, a difference which is reflected clinically by infection susceptibility. The sex difference noted is novel and may be limited to the preterm or early neonatal population as TLR2 expression on monocytes of older children does not differ between males and females. The differences shown in female and male innate immune cells likely reflect a superior innate immune defense system in females with sex differences in immune cell maturation. Existing human studies on sex differences in miRNA expression do not include preterm patients, and most frequently use either adult blood or cord blood. Our findings suggest that miRNA profiles are similar in neonates of opposite sexes at term but require further investigation in the preterm population. Our findings, while novel, provide only very limited insights into sex differences in infection susceptibility in the preterm population leaving many areas that require further study. These represent important areas for ongoing clinical and laboratory study and our findings represent an important contribution to exiting literature.
科学证据提供了对男婴和女婴之间免疫反应差异的更广泛认识。X 染色体编码了几个在先天免疫反应中重要的基因,新生儿的先天免疫细胞表达受体,并受到母体性激素的抑制。我们假设,先天免疫反应中的性别差异可能存在于新生儿群体中,这可能导致早产儿男性对败血症的易感性增加。我们旨在研究男性和女性新生儿中性粒细胞和单核细胞中促炎刺激物和激素的影响,研究先天免疫中涉及的 X 连锁基因的表达,以及这些群体中的 miRNA 谱。
从都柏林库姆妇女和婴儿大学医院招募早产儿(n=21)和足月对照(n=19)婴儿,经伦理批准并获得明确同意。早产儿(女婴 8 例,男婴 13 例)的平均胎龄(均值±标准差)为 28±2 周,校正胎龄为 30+2.6 周。早产儿的平均出生体重为 1084±246g。采集外周血样本分析免疫细胞表型、miRNA 人类面板和炎症小体和炎症基因的 RNA 谱。
按性别划分中性粒细胞结果显示,足月或早产儿中性粒细胞的基线 CD11b 无性别差异。按性别检查单核细胞 CD11b 时发现,在基线时,早产儿女性的总单核细胞和经典单核细胞的 CD11b 高于早产儿男性。脂多糖(LPS)暴露前后,中性粒细胞 TLR2 的性别差异无统计学意义。与女性相比,Pam3CSK 处理后的早产儿男性非经典单核细胞的 CD11b 表达更高,这是我们研究中特有的发现。与足月相比,早产儿总单核细胞、经典单核细胞和非经典单核细胞的 TLR2 表达在基线时更高。仅在早产儿女性和足月女性之间观察到 TLR2 表达的性别差异。激素治疗无性别差异,男性和女性之间 X 连锁基因表达无差异。两个 miRNA,miR-212-3p 和 miR-218-2-3p 在早产儿女性中的表达明显高于早产儿男性。
本研究在性别分层的基础上,检查了早产儿中性粒细胞表型和 X 连锁基因表达。我们的研究结果表明,女性的免疫细胞成熟反应随着胎龄的增加而成熟,而男性的足月和早产儿有非常相似的反应。与男性相比,女性早产儿的单核细胞激活得到改善,这可能反映了临床感染风险较低的先天免疫功能的改善。按性别划分结果显示,无论是在基线时还是在 LPS 刺激后,无论是在早产儿还是足月儿中,都存在变化,这种差异在感染易感性方面反映了临床情况。这种性别差异是新的,可能仅限于早产儿或早期新生儿人群,因为年龄较大的儿童单核细胞上的 TLR2 表达在男性和女性之间没有差异。女性和男性先天免疫细胞中显示的差异可能反映了女性先天免疫系统的防御能力更强,免疫细胞成熟存在性别差异。现有的关于 miRNA 表达性别差异的人类研究不包括早产儿,并且最常使用成人血液或脐带血。我们的研究结果表明,足月新生儿的 miRNA 谱在性别上相似,但在早产儿人群中需要进一步研究。我们的研究结果虽然新颖,但仅对早产儿人群的感染易感性提供了非常有限的见解,留下了许多需要进一步研究的领域。这些领域是正在进行的临床和实验室研究的重要领域,我们的研究结果代表了对现有文献的重要贡献。