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"... Now, researchers have discovered over 1,000 genetic switches that operate differently in female and male immune cells, driving higher overall activity of inflammatory pathways in females. ...
Until recently, technological limitations meant that immune differences between the sexes were studied using bulk blood analysis, which measures the average activity across a whole mixture of cells, masking specific cell behaviours. Advances in single-cell technologies now allow researchers to study individual immune cells in great detail. This study is the first to examine immunity differences between males and females at single-cell resolution on this scale.
The team sequenced over 1.25 million peripheral blood mononuclear cells – immune cells circulating in the blood – from nearly 1,000 healthy individuals. ...
The analysis revealed distinct cellular profiles between the sexes.
Males had higher proportions of monocytes, cells that act as first immune responders, and their genetic activity was more concentrated on basic cellular maintenance and protein-building functions.
In contrast, females possessed higher levels of immune cells called B cells and regulatory T cells, with genetic activity heavily skewed towards inflammatory pathways. ...
they discovered that the vast majority of these variations reside on autosomes – the shared non-sex chromosomes – identifying over 1,000 sex-specific genetic switches in these regions.
Importantly, these genetic controls were linked directly to autoimmune conditions. The team found specific variants affecting the female-biased expression of two genes associated with systemic lupus erythematosus, potentially helping to explain why lupus is nine times higher in women compared to men. ..."
From the abstract:
"Sex has a key role in disease susceptibility (in particular, autoimmunity). Sex differences in the immune system originate from genes and their interactions with both intrinsic and extrinsic factors. However, the cellular-level factors influencing sexual dimorphism are not fully understood.
We thus examined immune sex differences at single-cell resolution to dissect the genetic impacts. Female-biased sex-differentially expressed genes (sex-DEGs) in multiple immune cells were involved in tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) signaling, whereas male DEGs were enriched for ribosomal-related functions. While cis-expression trait quantitative loci (eQTLs) were less common on sex chromosomes, we identified over 1,000 sex-specific eQTLs and 51 sex-interacting eQTLs on autosomes.
When we examined the effect of genetic control on sex-DEGs, we found genetic variants affecting the female-biased expression of FCGR3A in natural killer (NK) cells (rs2099684) and ITGB2 in monocytes (rs760462), both of which are associated with systemic lupus erythematosus.
Our work reveals biases masked in bulk analyses and highlights sexually dimorphic genes and pathways at baseline."
Graphical abstract
Figure 3 Sex-differential expression
