| Literature DB >> 29922331 |
Carolina Torres-Rojas1, Byron C Jones1,2.
Abstract
A major development in biomedical research is the recognition that the sex of an individual plays a key role in susceptibility, treatment, and outcomes of most diseases. In this contribution, we present evidence that sex is also important in the toxicity of many environmental toxicants and contributes to the effect of genetics. Thus, individual differences in response to toxicants includes genetic makeup, the environment and sex; in fact, sex differences may be considered a part of genetic constitution. In this review, we present evidence for sex contribution to susceptibility for a number of toxicants.Entities:
Keywords: drugs; imprinting effects; neurotoxicity; sex differences; sex susceptibility; toxicants; toxicogenetics
Year: 2018 PMID: 29922331 PMCID: PMC5996082 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2018.00196
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
Sex susceptibility to toxicants and related biological factors that influence neurotoxicity.
| Neurotoxicant or biological factor | Sex susceptibility | Reference | Species | Genetics or related variables | Biological characteristic |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neurochemistry | M > F | Rodent | 1 | Monoaminergic system | |
| Mitochondria | M > F | Human | Mitochondrial reductase, citrate synthase, and succinate dehydrogenase are higher in females | Enzymatic activity in mitochondria | |
| Neuroimmunology and neuroepigenetics | inconclusive | Rats | 1Quantities of microglia are higher in males. 2DNA methyltransferase activity is higher in female preoptic area, 70 differentially expressed genes. | Microglia proliferation. Medial preoptic area global DNA methylation and expression. | |
| Glutamate Glu-induced excitotoxicity | M > F | Rats | Glu, GLN/GS, Glu/GABA, Glu/GLT1, GAD-67 | Neurotransmitter levels. Glu induced excitotoxicity. | |
| Medical fibrates: gemfibrozil pretreatment | M > F | Rats | TNF-α, NF-κB, cyclooxygenase-2, Nrf-2, superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione level | Antioxidant defense system and inflammatory response | |
| Selenium | M > F | Mice | Selenoprotein P, Selenoprotein M, GSH peroxidase 1 | Neurological disfunction by Selenium metabolism impairment | |
| Nanomolar concentrations of methylmercury | M > F | Primary fetal human neural progenitor cells hNPCs | Alteration of TUJ1-positive cells, neurite extension and cell migration, | ||
| Methylmercury | M > F | 1Mice 2Human | 1TrxR, Trx and GPx. 2 | 1Antioxidant activities. 2Adult cognitive performance and MeHg toxicokinetics. | |
| Northern contaminant mixture: methylmercury, polychlorinated biphenyls, and organochlorine pesticides | inconclusive | Rats | 1 | 1Gene expression under co-exposure to toxicants and individual exposure to 2MeHg, 3polychlorinated biphenyls, 4organochlorine pesticides | |
| Manganese | ∗M > F ∗∗F > M | 1Mice 2,3Human | 1 | 1Transporter affecting manganese accumulation. 2,3Cognitive functions. | |
| Zinc chloride and Malathion | M > F | AChE, Glutathione reductase, glutathione S-transferase, GPx and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase | Cholinergic and glutathione-antioxidant systems in hippocampus and cerebral cortex | ||
| Lead | M > F | Mice | Dopamine turnover in forebrain, spontaneous motor activity, amphetamine-induced motor activity and rotarod performance | Neurotoxic effects | |
| Ethanol | F > M | 1,2,5Mice 3,4,6Rats | 1 | 1Genes that are targeted by glucocorticoids, immune and cell death-related responses. 2Levels of inflammatory mediators, apoptotic cleavage of caspase-3. 3Neuroadaptation of | |
| Cocaine | ∗F > M ∗∗F = M | 1Rats 2Human | 1∗Subjective effects and self-administration of the drug. 2∗∗Plasma cytokine concentrations. 2∗ | 1Subjective effects. 2Physiological changes or immune system mobilization. | |
| Methamphetamine | ∗M > F ∗∗F > M | Mice | 1∗Bcl-2 and PAI-1. 2∗∗Glial fibrillary acidic protein and insulin like growth factor 1 receptor. 3∗DA | 1Factors that mediate apoptosis, thrombosis, and atherosclerosis. 2Protein expression. 3Striatal Dopamine | |
| 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine, | ∗F > M ∗∗M > F | 1Human 2Rats | 1∗5-HTTLPR or COMT val158met. 1∗Dizziness, depression/ sadness, psychotic symptoms, and sedation. 2∗∗Locomotor effects, hyperpyrexia, and lethality. | 1Clinical pharmacology and behavioral effects. 2Physiological effects. | |
| Organo-Phosphate pesticides: 1Dimethoate 2Mancozeb | ∗M > F ∗∗F > M | 1Mice 2Human | 1∗IL-6, IL-1β, TNF-α, INF-γ-inducible IP10, ERβ, steroidogenic acute regulatory protein, aromatase mRNA levels and ERα protein levels. 2∗Working memory. 2∗∗Processing speed. | 1Expression of inflammatory molecules, production of ROS, expression of steroidogenic proteins and ER in cortical astrocyte-enriched cultures. 2Cognitive functions. | |
| Organochlorine pesticides: Dieldrin | M > F | 1 | 1GABAA receptor signaling in hypothalamus. 2Suicide rate. | 1GABAergic and dopaminergic signaling. 2Behavioral effect. | |
| MPTP | ∗F > M ∗∗inconclusive | Mice | 1∗DA, DAT, HVA, 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid. 2∗∗ | 1Time-dependent alterations in striatum. 2,3Vulnerability of the nigrostriatal pathway. | |
| Oxidative stress-induced toxicity | M > F | Mice | Astrocytes and neurons sensitivity | ||
| Diesel exhaust exposure | M > F | Mice | 1Microglia mediate primary cerebellar granule neuron death | 1Microglia and cerebellar granule neurons sensitivity. 2Pro-inflammatory cytokines in olfactory bulb and hippocampus, oxidative stress as lipid peroxidation. | |
| Bisphenol-A | ∗F > M ∗∗M > F | 1Rodent 2Mice | 1∗ERα transcription in the sexually dimorphic area of the hypothalamus. 2∗∗ | 1Effect on ER. 2Gene expression and behavioral effect. | |
| Imprinting effects | inconclusive | Mice | Expression levels of imprinted genes in brain | ||