Cargando…

Sex differences in susceptibility to influenza A virus infection depend on host genotype

Infection with the respiratory pathogen influenza A virus (IAV) causes significant morbidity and mortality each year. While host genotype is thought to contribute to severity of disease, naturally occurring genetic determinants remain mostly unknown. Moreover, more severe disease is seen in women co...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sabikunnahar, Bristy, Lahue, Karolyn G., Asarian, Loredana, Fang, Qian, McGill, Mahalia M., Haynes, Laura, Teuscher, Cory, Krementsov, Dimitry N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9481031/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36112601
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0273050
_version_ 1784791172056612864
author Sabikunnahar, Bristy
Lahue, Karolyn G.
Asarian, Loredana
Fang, Qian
McGill, Mahalia M.
Haynes, Laura
Teuscher, Cory
Krementsov, Dimitry N.
author_facet Sabikunnahar, Bristy
Lahue, Karolyn G.
Asarian, Loredana
Fang, Qian
McGill, Mahalia M.
Haynes, Laura
Teuscher, Cory
Krementsov, Dimitry N.
author_sort Sabikunnahar, Bristy
collection PubMed
description Infection with the respiratory pathogen influenza A virus (IAV) causes significant morbidity and mortality each year. While host genotype is thought to contribute to severity of disease, naturally occurring genetic determinants remain mostly unknown. Moreover, more severe disease is seen in women compared with men, but genetic mechanisms underlying this sex difference remain obscure. Here, using IAV infection in a mouse model of naturally selected genetic diversity, namely C57BL6/J (B6) mice carrying chromosomes (Chr) derived from the wild-derived and genetically divergent PWD/PhJ (PWD) mouse strain (B6.Chr(PWD) consomic mice), we examined the effects of genotype and sex on severity of IAV-induced disease. Compared with B6, parental PWD mice were completely protected from IAV-induced disease, a phenotype that was fully recapitulated in the B6.Chr16(PWD) strain carrying the PWD-derived allele of Mx1. In contrast, several other consomic strains, including B6.Chr3(PWD) and B6.Chr5(PWD), demonstrated greatly increased susceptibility. Notably, B6.Chr5(PWD) and B6.ChrX.3(PWD) strains, the latter carrying the distal one-third of ChrX from PWD, exhibited increased morbidity and mortality specifically in male but not female mice. Follow up analyses focused on B6 and B6.ChrX.3(PWD) strains demonstrated moderately elevated viral load in B6.ChrX3(PWD) male, but not female mice. Transcriptional profiling demonstrated genotype- and sex-specific gene expression profiles in the infected lung, with male B6.ChrX.3 mice exhibiting the most significant changes, including upregulation of a proinflammatory gene expression program associated with myeloid cells, and altered sex-biased expression of several X-linked genes that represent positional candidates, including Tlr13 and Slc25a53. Taken together, our results identify novel loci on autosomes and the X chromosome regulating IAV susceptibility and demonstrate that sex differences in IAV susceptibility are genotype-dependent, suggesting that future genetic association studies need to consider sex as a covariate.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9481031
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-94810312022-09-17 Sex differences in susceptibility to influenza A virus infection depend on host genotype Sabikunnahar, Bristy Lahue, Karolyn G. Asarian, Loredana Fang, Qian McGill, Mahalia M. Haynes, Laura Teuscher, Cory Krementsov, Dimitry N. PLoS One Research Article Infection with the respiratory pathogen influenza A virus (IAV) causes significant morbidity and mortality each year. While host genotype is thought to contribute to severity of disease, naturally occurring genetic determinants remain mostly unknown. Moreover, more severe disease is seen in women compared with men, but genetic mechanisms underlying this sex difference remain obscure. Here, using IAV infection in a mouse model of naturally selected genetic diversity, namely C57BL6/J (B6) mice carrying chromosomes (Chr) derived from the wild-derived and genetically divergent PWD/PhJ (PWD) mouse strain (B6.Chr(PWD) consomic mice), we examined the effects of genotype and sex on severity of IAV-induced disease. Compared with B6, parental PWD mice were completely protected from IAV-induced disease, a phenotype that was fully recapitulated in the B6.Chr16(PWD) strain carrying the PWD-derived allele of Mx1. In contrast, several other consomic strains, including B6.Chr3(PWD) and B6.Chr5(PWD), demonstrated greatly increased susceptibility. Notably, B6.Chr5(PWD) and B6.ChrX.3(PWD) strains, the latter carrying the distal one-third of ChrX from PWD, exhibited increased morbidity and mortality specifically in male but not female mice. Follow up analyses focused on B6 and B6.ChrX.3(PWD) strains demonstrated moderately elevated viral load in B6.ChrX3(PWD) male, but not female mice. Transcriptional profiling demonstrated genotype- and sex-specific gene expression profiles in the infected lung, with male B6.ChrX.3 mice exhibiting the most significant changes, including upregulation of a proinflammatory gene expression program associated with myeloid cells, and altered sex-biased expression of several X-linked genes that represent positional candidates, including Tlr13 and Slc25a53. Taken together, our results identify novel loci on autosomes and the X chromosome regulating IAV susceptibility and demonstrate that sex differences in IAV susceptibility are genotype-dependent, suggesting that future genetic association studies need to consider sex as a covariate. Public Library of Science 2022-09-16 /pmc/articles/PMC9481031/ /pubmed/36112601 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0273050 Text en © 2022 Sabikunnahar et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sabikunnahar, Bristy
Lahue, Karolyn G.
Asarian, Loredana
Fang, Qian
McGill, Mahalia M.
Haynes, Laura
Teuscher, Cory
Krementsov, Dimitry N.
Sex differences in susceptibility to influenza A virus infection depend on host genotype
title Sex differences in susceptibility to influenza A virus infection depend on host genotype
title_full Sex differences in susceptibility to influenza A virus infection depend on host genotype
title_fullStr Sex differences in susceptibility to influenza A virus infection depend on host genotype
title_full_unstemmed Sex differences in susceptibility to influenza A virus infection depend on host genotype
title_short Sex differences in susceptibility to influenza A virus infection depend on host genotype
title_sort sex differences in susceptibility to influenza a virus infection depend on host genotype
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9481031/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36112601
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0273050
work_keys_str_mv AT sabikunnaharbristy sexdifferencesinsusceptibilitytoinfluenzaavirusinfectiondependonhostgenotype
AT lahuekarolyng sexdifferencesinsusceptibilitytoinfluenzaavirusinfectiondependonhostgenotype
AT asarianloredana sexdifferencesinsusceptibilitytoinfluenzaavirusinfectiondependonhostgenotype
AT fangqian sexdifferencesinsusceptibilitytoinfluenzaavirusinfectiondependonhostgenotype
AT mcgillmahaliam sexdifferencesinsusceptibilitytoinfluenzaavirusinfectiondependonhostgenotype
AT hayneslaura sexdifferencesinsusceptibilitytoinfluenzaavirusinfectiondependonhostgenotype
AT teuschercory sexdifferencesinsusceptibilitytoinfluenzaavirusinfectiondependonhostgenotype
AT krementsovdimitryn sexdifferencesinsusceptibilitytoinfluenzaavirusinfectiondependonhostgenotype