Abstract
Despite accumulating evidence in support of sex-based differences in innate and adaptive immune responses, in the susceptibility to infectious diseases and in the prevalence of autoimmune diseases, health research and clinical practice do not address these distinctions, and most research studies of immune responses do not stratify by sex. X-linked genes, hormones and societal context are among the many factors that contribute to disparate immune responses in males and females. It is crucial to address sex-based differences in disease pathogenesis and in the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of therapeutic medications to provide optimal disease management for both sexes.
Main
Human illnesses affect men and women differently. In general, both the proportion of individuals infected and the severity of infection are higher in males than females for viral, bacterial, fungal and parasitic diseases1,2. However, the prevalence of sexually transmitted infections (STIs), such as HIV and herpes simplex virus-2 (HSV-2), is higher among women. In addition, many autoimmune diseases affect more women than men; systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), Graves' disease, Hashimoto's thyroiditis and Sjögren's syndrome exhibit a 7–10:1 female:male predominance, and multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis and scleroderma a 2–3:1 female:male ratio. By contrast, ankylosing spondylitis, Goodpasture syndrome, Reiter syndrome and vasculitis all occur predominantly in males3,4.
Sex-based differences in disease are a consequence of genetic differences that are attributable to X-chromosome inactivation, to differences in the expression of steroid hormones, and to differences in anatomy, gender or life experiences. The consequence of failing to include sex-based differences in study design and analyses has effectively led to 'one-drug' treatment regimens for both men and women. As a result of this bias, differences in drug efficacy and side-effect profiles reportedly led to the withdrawal of eight out of ten prescription drugs from the United States market in 2005, specifically owing to health issues in women5.
The under-representation of females in clinical studies has resulted in the disparity in both the understanding and the treatment of diseases in the individual sexes. Certainly, there are examples of specific clinical trials in which the proportion of male to female study participants reflects the prevalence of the condition under study in the general population. For example, more female than male participants have been enrolled in clinical trials for antidepressants and anti-inflammatory drugs, whereas primarily male participants (age <60 years) have been enrolled in clinical trials for drugs for cardiovascular diseases6,7. However, even in studies where female and male participation allow the analysis of the safety and efficacy of a therapy for both sexes or in the predisposed sex, inadequate emphasis has been placed on the identification of pharmacokinetic differences between males and females (Box 1), or among females during different phases of their ovarian cycle.
The historical under-representation of women in clinical trails is understandable. In 1977, Food and Drug Administration (FDA) guidelines explicitly prohibited the participation of 'women of childbearing potential' in Phase 1 and early Phase 2 clinical trials. In 1993, the FDA made two changes in policy for the study and evaluation of drugs in women: first, sex-specific analyses of the safety and efficacy of the tested drugs were required; and second, it was no longer recommended that women of childbearing potential be restricted from participating in early drug trials. The National Institutes of Health (NIH) Revitalization Act of 1993 required that NIH-funded clinical trials include women as subjects, and in 1998 the FDA mandated that new drug applications must include data on the safety and effectiveness of the drug for each sex. So far, however, there has been inadequate compliance to these policies. It is highly probable that the added economic cost of expanding a clinical trial to include appropriate numbers of women, including women during different hormonal phases, to afford sufficient power for the detection of sex-based differences both in pharmacokinetics and in clinical responses, is the main factor behind non-compliance.
In this Perspective, I review sex-based differences in the immune response in the context of autoimmune diseases and viral infections, and discuss the implications and clinical significance of these issues for drug development and effective health care.
The X chromosome and disease
The X chromosome encodes approximately 1,100 genes, most of which are distinct from the fewer than 100 genes that are expressed on the Y chromosome (Fig. 1). A priori, expression of the few unique Y-linked genes might underlie some sex differences in disease susceptibility. Notably, a recent study of transgenic mice that were created to compare disease susceptibility in XX and XY mice with a common gonadal type revealed that the XX-chromosome complement conferred a greater susceptibility to both SLE and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), a mouse model of multiple sclerosis, compared with the XY-chromosome complement8. By contrast, normal males are more vulnerable to X-linked diseases as they have a single X chromosome, whereas females have two, which provides the added biological advantage of the cellular mosaicism that is associated with X-inactivation9. Importantly, humans are an outbred species and therefore exhibit allelic diversity in X-chromosome genes in contrast to inbred mice, in which maternal and paternal X- chromosome genes are identical. As a result, a mutation on the maternal X-chromosome gene might not exist in the paternal X-chromosome gene in humans.
X-chromosome inactivation provides dosage compensation for X-linked genes between XX females and XY males. In a random process, one of the two X chromosomes is transcriptionally silenced early in female development, which leads to the mosaic expression of either the maternal (Xm) or paternal (Xp) X chromosome in different cell populations. Thus, as a result of X-inactivation, potentially half of the cells express an X-linked gene mutation in females, whereas all cells in males express an X-linked gene mutation. For example, a mutation in the γ-chain subunit that is common to receptors for interleukin 2 (IL-2), IL-4, IL-7, IL-9, IL-15 and IL-21, causes X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (XSCID)10, a disease that was originally identified in a family of genetically related males11. In males, all immune-cell lineages that normally express this receptor subunit harbour the X-linked gene mutation, whereas X-inactivation in females provides for restricted expression of the mutation and thereby diminishes the extent of immune deficiency.
IPEX (immune dysregulation, polyendocrinopathy, enteropathy, X-linked syndrome), a rare inflammatory disease that is caused by mutations in the gene that encodes the transcriptional regulator FOXP3 (forkhead box P3), destroys the immunoregulatory environment in affected male infants12. Without a functional FOXP3 protein, regulatory T (TReg) cells do not develop normally and the immune suppression that is mediated by this subset of T cells is absent. Again, X-inactivation gives females protection from IPEX; although 100% of the cells in males that express FOXP3 display the mutation, the normal TReg cells that express the wild-type gene are sufficient to maintain homeostasis in females.
In heterozygous females, metabolic cooperation can contribute an added advantage. More specifically, if the X-linked gene encodes a secreted protein, expression of the intact gene by some cells allows for the uptake of the protein by null cells that express the defective gene. For example, Hunter syndrome, a lysosomal storage disease that results in severe and progressive symptoms which affect many organs, is caused by defects in the enzyme iduronate sulphatose, which is synthesized in some cells of carrier females but not in others. The defect in the mutant cells is corrected by the transfer of iduronate sulphatase from the wild-type cells that secrete the functional enzyme13. Accordingly, carrier females are usually unaffected by the X-linked iduronate sulphatase gene defect.
The skewing of X-inactivation can provide another advantage to heterozygous females, as this process can lead to the selection of wild-type cells over mutant cells. For example, non-random inactivation of the X chromosome that carries the defective Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome gene (mutation of which causes a life-threatening immunodeficiency in affected males) occurs in the early-lineage haematopoietic cells of female carriers, thereby preventing the disease14. Although the skewing of X-inactivation to select for normal cells is beneficial and occurs in the majority of instances, extreme skewed X-inactivation has also been implicated in the aetiology of autoimmune diseases, such as scleroderma15. The skewed X-inactivation of genes that are involved in antigen processing in discrete cell populations in the thymus, such as dendritic cells (DCs) that present antigen to T cells undergoing selection, might affect the recognition of self antigens and thereby cause a loss of immunological tolerance, which is a feature of many autoimmune diseases.
Viewed together, the genetic contribution of X-inactivation effectively provides females with a more extensive repertoire of proteins and the potential for diversity in many physiological processes, compared with males. However, the influence of X-inactivation and X-linked gene mutations to disease susceptibility is complicated by other factors. More specifically, mutations in non-X-linked genes that are associated with chromatin remodelling or transcriptional and translational events also have the potential to influence X-inactivation and the expression of genes from the X chromosome. Moreover, mutations in any of the transcriptional and translational genes that are encoded on the X chromosome (Fig. 1) could influence gene expression from other chromosomes.
Sex-based differences in immunity
Oestrogen influences immunocompetence. As a general rule, females exhibit more robust cell-mediated and humoral immune responses to antigenic challenges, such as infection and vaccination, compared with males. Oestrogens, such as 17β-oestradiol (also known as E2) and oestriol, progesterone and testosterone, can mediate many of the sex-based differences in immune responses16. Oestrogens exert their effects by binding to cognate intracellular receptors. The two subtypes of the receptor for oestrogens, oestrogen receptor α (ERα; also known as ESR1) and ERβ (also known as ESR2), are expressed by many types of immune cell, including T cells, B cells, dendritic cells (DCs), macrophages, neutrophils and natural killer (NK) cells, which suggests that oestrogens might have a role in the regulation of immunocompetence (Fig. 2). Oestrogen–ERα or –ERβ complexes translocate to the nucleus, where they bind to distinct ER-responsive elements in the promoters of target genes, thereby regulating transcriptional activity. In addition, oestrogen–ERα or oestrogen–ERβ complexes might regulate the transcriptional activity of genes that do not have an ER-responsive element by recruiting co-regulatory proteins that can activate or repress transcription17. Interestingly, ligands for ERα and ERβ exert different influences on the course of EAE. More specifically, treatment with either an ERα ligand or with 17β-oestradiol (which binds to both ERα and ERβ) is anti-inflammatory and abrogates the onset of EAE, whereas treatment with a specific ERβ ligand is neuroprotective but not anti-inflammatory18.
Women have higher CD4+ T-cell numbers than men19, and TReg-cell frequencies within the CD4+ population undergo profound changes during the ovarian cycle that potentially affect immunoregulation. TReg-cell numbers increase during the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle, when oestrogen levels are high, and decrease during the luteal phase, when oestrogen levels are low20 (Fig. 3). TReg cells regulate the size of the peripheral T-cell pool, modulate immune responses to infection and participate in the maintenance of self-tolerance by suppressing immune responses mediated by autoreactive T cells that can contribute to autoimmune disease21. Accordingly, variation in the number of TReg cells over the course of the menstrual cycle will influence immune responses. In addition, TReg-cell functional deficits have been implicated in autoimmune diseases, such as multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis22,23.
Distinct from the effects on TReg-cell numbers, oestrogens affect the expression of some chemokine receptors by T cells. Oestrogens selectively increase the expression and responsiveness of CC-chemokine receptor 5 (CCR5) and CCR1 in CD4+ T cells, which has important implications for T-cell homing in the context of both infection and autoimmunity24.
Oestrogens might also exert a biphasic effect on T helper 1 (TH1)-cell versus TH2-cell differentiation. Specifically, low doses of oestrogens have been associated with TH1-cell responses and enhanced cell-mediated immunity, whereas high doses of oestrogens promote TH2-cell and humoral responses. Interestingly, there is evidence to suggest that the contrasting effects of oestrogens on T-bet, a master regulator of TH1-cell differentiation, and interferon regulatory factor-1 (IRF1), a transcription factor that is associated with the regulation of interferon-γ (IFNγ), may be dose-dependent and account for TH1-cell versus TH2-cell differentiation. Lower levels of oestrogen might contribute to increased expression of T-bet, whereas higher levels might downregulate the expression of IRF1 (Ref. 25). Although low doses of oestrogen are associated with enhanced IFNγ expression by TH1 cells, higher doses of oestrogen enhance IL-4 production. In addition, oestrogens are negative regulators of CD4+ T-cell-derived tumour-necrosis factor (TNF) (Fig. 2).
The influence of oestrogens on the TH-cell bias is exemplified by the hormonal environment during pregnancy, in which increased oestrogen and progesterone levels in the third trimester favour the generation of TH2-cell responses. Notably, oestriol, an oestrogen metabolite that is derived from the placenta, is only produced in significant amounts during pregnancy. For some autoimmune diseases, hormonal fluctuations during pregnancy affect disease activity: the TH2-cell-type environment contributes to enhanced antibody production that exacerbates SLE25, whereas suppression of TH1-cell responses by oestrogens results in decreased disease activity in patients with rheumatoid arthritis26. For multiple sclerosis, recent evidence from EAE models suggests that the decrease in disease activity during pregnancy is probably associated with an immunoregulatory environment rather than with the suppression of TH1-cell responses27. These findings have led to the initiation of several pilot clinical studies to examine the effects of oestriol therapy in multiple sclerosis28. Notably, the remission of rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis during pregnancy is often followed by a flare of disease activity post-partum, when oestrogen and progesterone levels fall29,30.
Oestrogens also affect B-cell development by decreasing negative selection of naive immature B cells, enhancing the survival of autoreactive B cells31 and enhancing polyclonal activation of B cells, which leads to higher serum levels of IgG and IgM (mediated by CD95–CD95L interactions32). These B-cell effects might contribute to the increased incidence of many autoimmune diseases in women.
The effects of oestrogens on the innate immune responses that are mediated by monocytes and macrophages are largely repressive33. CD16 (also known as FcγRIIIA) is a receptor expressed by monocytes and macrophages that is activated by self antigens and rheumatoid factor to induce signalling cascades that stimulate cytokine production. Oestrogens can modulate CD16 expression by monocytes and macrophages. The interaction of ERα with the CD16 promoter suppresses the expression of CD16 (Ref. 34) and, consequently, oestrogens reduce monocyte and macrophage production of the pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-1β, IL-6 and TNF in vitro35. In addition, oestrogens decrease plasma IL-6 levels, and the production of TNF and IL-1β is increased during the luteal phase (low oestrogen) compared with the follicular (high oestrogen) phase of the ovarian cycle16.
In addition to their anti-inflammatory effects on monocytes that are mediated by decreasing the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines, oestrogens exert anti-inflammatory effects on neutrophils by increasing nitric-oxide synthase expression and nitric-oxide production36. Additionally, progesterone enhances the chemotactic activity of neutrophils, whereas oestrogens decrease it37.
Oestrogens also have an effect on other innate immune cells. More specifically, oestrogens decrease the cytotoxicity of NK cells38. In addition, recent data indicate that oestrogens can also regulate DC development39; exposure of bone-marrow DC precursors to oestrogens facilitated their development into conventional DCs that secreted pro-inflammatory IL-12. Furthermore, exposure of mature splenic DCs to oestrogens resulted in the expansion of IFNγ-producing killer DCs (which had a CD11c+ MHC class II+ CD49b+ NK1.1high phenotype)39. 17β-oestradiol treatment of immature DCs increases IL-6, IL-8 (also known as CXCL8) and CCL2 (also known as MCP1) production40 (Fig. 2).
Moreover, oestrogens can further shape the immune response by affecting microvascular endothelial cells, which actively recruit immune and inflammatory cells to lymphoid and peripheral tissues through the expression of adhesion molecules and chemokines41. More specifically, oestrogens influence endothelial-cell function by differentially regulating ERα and ERβ expression and by selectively enhancing the expression of adhesion molecules and chemokines.
Notably, the effects of androgens, such as testosterone, on immune function are largely suppressive, thereby leading to decreased T- and B-cell proliferation and decreased immunoglobulin and cytokine production42. Testosterone decreases the expression of macrophage and monocyte Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), a receptor that is involved in activating the innate immune system in response to pathogen challenge, and this decrease in TLR4 expression provides a potential underlying mechanism for the immunosuppressive effects of testosterone43. It is also worth noting that oestrogens can be derived from the conversion of androgens by aromatase enzymes. The presence of the pro-inflammatory cytokines TNF, IL-1β and IL-6 in the affected tissues of individuals with rheumatoid arthritis44 and SLE45 has been associated with increased aromatase activity and a corresponding acceleration in the synthesis of oestrogens. The paracrine effects of increased oestrogen levels in affected tissues could thereby influence disease activity by affecting the function of resident T cells, B cells, monocytes and macrophages, as described previously. However, the role of oestrogen metabolites, such as 16α-hydroxyestrone and 2-hydroxyoestrogen, as pro- and anti-inflammatory mediators, respectively, in these chronic inflammatory diseases remains unclear42.
Clearly, the widespread effects of oestrogens and progesterone on different immune cells have implications on disease susceptibility for both sexes. However, although it is known that sex differences predispose susceptibility to many autoimmune diseases, distinguishing sex-specific effects of sex steroids in pathology and therapy has received limited attention. A notable exception is in patients with multiple sclerosis; testosterone treatment exhibited potential neuroprotective effects in men with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis46. Given the evidence of disease remission during pregnancy, and the potential neuroprotective effects of ER ligands18, 17β-oestradiol treatment strategies offer the prospect of a novel therapy for women with multiple sclerosis.
The effects of oestrogens and hormone fluctuations that are related to the reproductive phase on immune-cell development and function, on cytokine and chemokine production, and on the migration of cells to sites of inflammation, all influence immunocompetence. Accordingly, hormones can affect the pathogenesis of chronic autoimmune and inflammatory diseases and can contribute to the higher incidence of certain autoimmune diseases in women. In addition to influencing the incidence and progression of certain autoimmune diseases, sex-based differences that affect immunocompetence can also influence susceptibility to infections and the severity of subsequent illnesses.
Sex-based differences in infectious diseases. Although the prevailing dogma is that females typically mount more robust immune responses to viral infections than males1, changes in hormone concentration owing to the menstrual cycle, contraception usage, hormone-replacement therapy and pregnancy can all influence the immune response to pathogens. In addition, men and women are also differentially susceptible to several DNA and RNA viruses, such as HSV-2, HIV, measles virus, hantaviruses and vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV)1. However, close scrutiny of the scientific literature reveals a scarcity of publications that have examined sex-based differences in human viral infectious diseases, as most studies have been carried out in mice or rats.
Data from rodent studies do, however, provide some insights into the mechanisms that contribute to sex-based differences in disease severity. Coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3) infection is associated with myocarditis47, and although men and women are equally susceptible to CVB3 infection, the cardioprotective effects of oestrogens have been linked to a lower incidence of heart disease in women48. Accumulating data indicate that the differences in the severity of myocarditis between the sexes are not limited to differences in the levels of viral replication in the heart, but are attributable to differences in the immune response to infection49,50. The higher levels of oestrogens in women decrease the expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines, whereas the more robust pro-inflammatory immune response to CVB3 infection in males increases inflammation in the heart. Recent data from mouse studies suggest that oestrogens mediate a decrease in the numbers of mast cells and macrophages in the infected hearts of females, with associated upregulation of T-cell immunoglobulin domain and mucin domain-3 (TIM3; also known as HAVCR2) by these cells. In turn, TIM3 inhibits TLR4 expression, thereby regulating the inflammatory response, and increases the size of the TReg-cell population. By contrast, infected male hearts show increased numbers of mast cells and macrophages with high expression of TLR4. This TLR4 expression in males inhibits downregulation of the inflammatory response and decreases TIM3 expression, thereby reducing the size of the TReg-cell population and inhibiting TIM3-mediated apoptosis50.
Similar to CVB3 infection in humans, male and female rats are equally susceptible to infection with the hantavirus Seoul virus, but females mount a more robust immune response to infection that results in decreased viral shedding and a lower viral load in target organs51. An analysis of the lungs of hantavirus-infected female rats revealed a pattern of gene expression that is associated with a robust innate antiviral immune response, namely increased levels of genes that encode microbial pattern recognition receptors, IFNβ and IFN-inducible signalling effectors, compared with the lungs of infected male rats52. Human studies indicate that more males than females are infected with hantaviruses53, which perhaps indicates that the more rigorous innate immune response that was identified in infected female rats also occurs in humans. Moreover, hantavirus-infected females had significantly higher plasma levels of IL-9 and lower levels of the pro-inflammatory chemokines CXCL8 and CXCL10 than males, which further supports the existence of sex-dependent differences in immune responses to viral infections54. Studies in mice suggest that sex-based differences in the susceptibility to viral infections of the central nervous system (CNS), such as VSV, also correspond to enhanced immunity in the CNS in females and are associated with recovery from this neurotropic viral infection55. Finally, although age was an important predictor of mortality from severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) during the virus outbreak in 2003, females had lower mortality rates than males, even after adjusting for age. It is tempting to speculate that a more robust innate antiviral immune response in females might have accounted for this reduced mortality rate56.
By contrast, Dengue virus infection is more severe in female children than in male children57. One possible explanation for this is that the stronger humoral immune response to the virus in females might be linked to the development of crossreactive, non-neutralizing antibodies that allow the virus replication to proceed unchecked. However, for herpesvirus infections, the stronger humoral immune response that is exhibited by females is advantageous, as men are more likely than women to be seronegative for the gammaherpesvirus Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), and seropositive women have higher EBV-specific antibody titres than seropositive men58. In addition, women infected with cytomegalovirus (CMV) produce higher levels of IFNγ and IL-2 than CMV-infected men, which is consistent with the more robust cell-mediated immune responses found in women59. These findings might help to explain why only females developed protective immunity to viral antigens in a Phase III HSV-2 clinical vaccine trial60 and further emphasize the importance of evaluating responses of both sexes in such studies.
The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that one million new cases of STIs occur daily worldwide. For both HIV and HSV-2 (the most common sexually transmitted virus), the rate of transmission from males to females is greater than from females to males, which contributes to the higher prevalence of STIs in females. The susceptibility of the mucosal surface of the female genital tract to infection with both HIV and HSV-2 is influenced by oestrogen and progesterone levels. Specifically, progesterone is protective and decreases viral shedding, whereas oestrogens increase viral shedding61,62. In the context of HIV infection, levels of viral RNA in the plasma are consistently lower in women than men. Given that the initial viral load after seroconversion is predictive of the likelihood of progression to AIDS in men, and that women have higher CD4+ T-cell counts, one would anticipate that women would therefore be at a lower risk of AIDS; however, this is not the case63.
Collectively, these findings indicate that sex-dependent factors influence both the susceptibility to numerous viral infections and their progression. For several viral infections, susceptibility is identical among men and women. However, fluctuations in oestrogen and progesterone levels directly affect immune responses at mucosal tissues, thereby influencing female susceptibility to sexually transmitted viral infections. The effects of oestrogens on cytokine and chemokine production promote an anti-inflammatory environment, which offers females protection from the immunopathology that is associated with certain viral infections. Notably, the changes in oestrogen levels in women that are determined by ovarian activity directly influence the profile of the immune response; low oestrogen levels are associated with a TH1-cell polarized response, which is linked to the production of cytokines with antiviral activity, whereas high oestrogen levels are associated with TH2-cell polarization and the production of cytokines that promote humoral immunity. The more vigorous humoral immune response in females is also a consequence of the direct effects of oestrogens on B-cell function, which enhances neutralizing antibody production and thereby assists in viral clearance.
The impact of gender differences. Differences in many infectious-disease processes between men and women arise based on sex and gender. Sex refers to the biological differences between males and females (as described previously in this Perspective article), whereas gender refers to the differences between males and females that are determined by cultural and societal factors.
A recent joint venture publication of the Departments of Gender, Women and Health, and Epidemic and Pandemic Alert and Response at the WHO noted that the reporting of and responses related to infectious outbreaks rarely included data on gender or sex differences56. In 2001, The Institute of Medicine suggested that assessments of differences in the incidence of many infectious diseases between males and females should also take into account differences in disease exposure64.
Perhaps the most compelling example in which gender is a significant factor in disease susceptibility relates to the contextual cultural and social realities that put women at high risk for contracting HIV in sub-Saharan Africa. Another interesting example is that of measles, where infection contracted from a child of the opposite sex is more severe than infection contracted from a child of the same sex64. Moreover, secondary cases of measles in the home are more severe and have higher mortality rates. The severity of secondary cases may relate to higher virus absorption that is associated with a higher infective dose65. In certain societies, fatality rates of measles cases are higher for females than for males, as girls remain at home and are therefore at a higher risk of infection from siblings inside the home. In addition, males can contract the disease outside the home and pass on the secondary, more severe infection to the females who remain inside the home62. Greater severity has also been associated with the transmission between the sexes of Varicella-Zoster virus (which causes chickenpox) and polio virus64. Thus, the increased severity of some infectious diseases in females can be the result of gender rather than sex differences.
Clinical implications
The basis for new therapeutic strategies and improved disease management includes learning more information about host–pathogen interactions and increasing our knowledge regarding the aetiology and pathogenesis of individual autoimmune diseases. The preceding discussion illustrates how sex-based differences in immune responses contribute to disease susceptibility and severity, which are regulated in part by interactions between sex steroid hormones and the immune system. In addition, a role for the sex-chromosome complement in determining the female bias of autoimmune diseases has been recognized8. Interestingly, there is evidence that the male sex-chromosome complement and male sex hormones might, under certain circumstances, have compensatory effects on the immune response and might thereby decrease the differences in the immune response between males and females that are conferred by sex chromosomes alone66. Specifically, compensatory effects of sex chromosome complement and sex hormones on an autoantigen-specific immune response were observed in a study of mice deficient in the testis-determinant Sry gene, which allowed the production of mice that differ in sex-chromosome complement while having the same gonadal type, and which used gonadectomization to address sex hormone influences66.
With few exceptions, however, sex-dependent differences in immune responses to infectious pathogens have been disregarded, and most studies of autoimmunity have not accounted for sex-related influences. In addition, studies of inbred mice cannot address the contributions of allelic diversity of genes on the X chromosome between males and females, and as such, investigation of sex-based differences in immune responses using mouse models are flawed. Therefore, accurate analyses of sex-based differences in immune responses will require examination of human tissues.
So far, drug development has proceeded without the consideration of sex-based differences in disease susceptibility or severity, which is particularly unfortunate as identification of sex-dependent factors could reveal potential new therapeutic targets. Moreover, drug development has so far not adequately addressed the accumulating evidence that suggests that sex-based differences affect pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics (Box 1). Antiretroviral therapies for HIV exemplify this, as various studies of these drugs have shown that women have more frequent and serious adverse events than men67, which is probably a consequence of sex-based differences in the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of antiretroviral drugs68. Overall, women are at a greater risk of suffering from adverse drug reactions from medications that are already on the market as a result of their under-representation in clinical trials and owing to the lack of detailed pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic studies that are sufficiently powered to detect sex-based effects. Published data on drug efficacy segregated by sex is also lacking. For example, data regarding sex-based differences in viroimmunologic outcomes in HIV-infected men and women on antiretroviral therapy are inconclusive, largely because these studies are underpowered to detect these differences69,70,71.
Together, these data indicate that the consequences of not considering sex-based differences in human illnesses are significant and unacceptable. With the advent of human tissue biobanks, there is the opportunity to investigate human tissues ex vivo to examine sex-based differences in immune responses. Disease-specific tissue biobanks in which individual patients provide multiple specimens over the course of disease offer the added advantage of allowing for the analysis of sex-dependent differences in the context of hormonal fluctuations in females. Prospective banking therefore requires that data on the phase of the menstrual cycle, pregnancy, contraception use and hormone-replacement therapy must be acquired when tissue specimens are collected from females. Future studies must address sex-based differences in immune responses to infectious and autoimmune diseases in all aspects of scientific inquiry and make these considerations a priority for comprehensive and effective health care. The responsibility resides with health-research funding agencies, including federal government drug-licensing agencies, to insist that research investigations are stratified to include sex-dependent analyses.
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The author acknowledgesthe Canadian government for the award of a Canada Research Chair in Women's Health & Immunonbiology, and Gillian Einstein (Department of Psychology, University of Toronto) for critical review of the manuscript.
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Fish, E. The X-files in immunity: sex-based differences predispose immune responses. Nat Rev Immunol 8, 737–744 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1038/nri2394
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nri2394
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