Immunity
Volume 39, Issue 2, 22 August 2013, Pages 400-412
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Article
Gender Bias in Autoimmunity Is Influenced by Microbiota

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.immuni.2013.08.013Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Relative resistance of male mice to autoimmune diabetes depends on gut microbiota

  • Males' and females' microbiotas diverge after puberty; male castration stops this trend

  • Not all microbes enhanced in males protect them from diabetes development

  • Enhanced interferon-γ production correlates with protection of male mice

Summary

Gender bias and the role of sex hormones in autoimmune diseases are well established. In specific pathogen-free nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice, females have 1.3–4.4 times higher incidence of type 1 diabetes (T1D). Germ-free (GF) mice lost the gender bias (female-to-male ratio 1.1–1.2). Gut microbiota differed in males and females, a trend reversed by male castration, confirming that androgens influence gut microbiota. Colonization of GF NOD mice with defined microbiota revealed that some, but not all, lineages overrepresented in male mice supported a gender bias in T1D. Although protection of males did not correlate with blood androgen concentration, hormone-supported expansion of selected microbial lineages may work as a positive-feedback mechanism contributing to the sexual dimorphism of autoimmune diseases. Gene-expression analysis suggested pathways involved in protection of males from T1D by microbiota. Our results favor a two-signal model of gender bias, in which hormones and microbes together trigger protective pathways.

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These authors contributed equally to this work