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Sex-chromosome mechanisms contribute to cardiac sex disparities

Authors :
Frank L. Conlon
Yutaka Hashimoto
Xinlei Sheng
Arthur P. Arnold
Joel D. Federspiel
Xuqi Chen
Ileana M. Cristea
Tia D. Andrade
Zachary L. Robbe
Kerry M. Dorr
Lauren K. Wasson
James I. Emerson
Wei Shi
Todd M. Greco
Josiah E. Hutton
Haley A. Davies
Source :
Dev Cell
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Sex disparities in cardiac homeostasis and heart disease are well documented, with differences attributed to actions of sex hormones. However, studies have indicated sex chromosomes act outside of the gonads to function without mediation by gonadal hormones. Here, we performed transcriptional and proteomics profiling to define differences between male and female mouse hearts. We demonstrate, contrary to current dogma, cardiac sex disparities are controlled not only by sex hormones but also through a sex-chromosome mechanism. Using Turner syndrome (XO) and Klinefelter (XXY) models, we find the sex-chromosome pathway is established by X-linked gene dosage. We demonstrate cardiac sex disparities occur at the earliest stages of heart formation, a period before gonad formation. Using these datasets, we identify and define a role for alpha-1B-glycoprotein (A1BG), showing loss of A1BG leads to cardiac defects in females, but not males. These studies provide resources for studying sex-biased cardiac disease states.

Details

ISSN :
17595010
Volume :
19
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature reviews. CardiologyOriginal article
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....db92e4f1d96929a574917b5b1ce678bf