| Literature DB >> 29201031 |
Andreas Koenig1, Iwona Buskiewicz1, Sally A Huber1.
Abstract
Sexual bias is a hallmark in various diseases. This review evaluates sexual dimorphism in clinical and experimental coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3) myocarditis, and how sex bias in the experimental disease changes with increased age. Coxsackieviruses are major causes of viral myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart muscle, which is more frequent and severe in men than women. Young male mice infected with CVB3 develop heart-specific autoimmunity and severe myocarditis. Females infected during estrus (high estradiol) develop T-regulatory cells and when infected during diestrus (low estradiol) develop autoimmunity similar to males. During estrus, protection depends on estrogen receptor alpha (ERα), which promotes type I interferon, activation of natural killer/natural killer T cells and suppressor cell responses. Estrogen receptor beta has opposing effects to ERα and supports pro-inflammatory immunity. However, the sexual dimorphism of the disease is significantly ameliorated in aged animals when old females become as susceptible as males. This correlates to a selective loss of the ERα that is required for immunosuppression. Therefore, sex-associated hormones control susceptibility in the virus-mediated disease, but their impact can alter with the age and physiological stage of the individual.Entities:
Keywords: T-regulatory cells and innate immunity; aging and immunocompetence; estrogen receptor alpha; estrogen receptor alpha:beta ratios and immune competence; mouse models; sex bias in coxsackievirus B3 myocarditis
Year: 2017 PMID: 29201031 PMCID: PMC5696718 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.01585
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Estrogen receptor expression by cells of the immune system.
| Cell | ERα | ERβ | GPER |
|---|---|---|---|
| CD4 T lymphocyte | H (high) | L | H |
| CD8 T lymphocyte | L (low) | L | |
| T regulatory cell | L | H | H |
| B lymphocyte | L | H | H |
| Natural killer cell | H | H | |
| Monocyte | L | H | |
| Macrophage | H | L | H |
| Myeloid dendritic cell | H | H |
Yakimchuk et al. (.
ERα, estrogen receptor alpha; ERβ, estrogen receptor beta; GPER, G protein-coupled estrogen receptor.
Figure 1Sexual dimorphism in coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3)-induced myocarditis: dependence on estrogen (E2) concentration and relative estrogen receptor alpha (ERα):estrogen receptor beta (ERβ) expression in lymphoid cells. Young females (age 2–3 months) have high ratios of ERα:ERβ in spleen cells resulting in robust type 1 interferon (IFN) responses to CVB3 infections, especially when virus infection occurs during estrus the time of peak E2. Signaling through ERα promotes T-regulatory cell responses leading to protection from myocarditis and animal mortality. Infection of young females during diestrus when E2 concentrations are low or infection of old females (12 months), which selectively lose ERα but increase ERβ expression in lymphoid cells results in reduced type 1 IFN response to CVB3 and prevents activation of T-regulatory cells. This results in induction of strong pro-inflammatory immunity and increased animal mortality and myocarditis, which is similar to disease observed in males. Thus, there is sexual dimorphism in CVB3-induced disease, but this can be dependent on both the hormonal state of the individual (stage of the estrus cycle when infection occurs) and the age of the individual when infection occurs. The age of the individual could be important as E2 regulation of dendritic cell development is well documented and is ERα dependent. Selective loss of ERα has been shown in the cardiovascular system with age and similar loss in lymphoid cells could affect immunocompetence.