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Sex-Biased Control of Inflammation and Metabolism by a Mitochondrial Nod-Like Receptor. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Mitochondria play a dual role in regulating steroid hormone synthesis, and sex hormones further influence mitochondrial function, which is key to maintaining cellular balance and managing inflammation.
  • The study focuses on Nod-like receptor X1 (NLRX1), a receptor associated with mitochondria that helps to modify metabolic functions and reduce inflammation, showing differing effects in female and male mice during infections.
  • Results indicated that NLRX1 reduced inflammation in female macrophages but not in males, highlighting sex-specific responses in immune and metabolic functions, which could help explain observed differences in disease outcomes between sexes.

Article Abstract

Mitochondria regulate steroid hormone synthesis, and in turn sex hormones regulate mitochondrial function for maintaining cellular homeostasis and controlling inflammation. This crosstalk can explain sex differences observed in several pathologies such as in metabolic or inflammatory disorders. Nod-like receptor X1 (NLRX1) is a mitochondria-associated innate receptor that could modulate metabolic functions and attenuates inflammatory responses. Here, we showed that in an infectious model with the human protozoan parasite, , NLRX1 attenuated inflammation in females but not in male mice. Analysis of infected female and male bone marrow derived macrophages showed both sex- and genotype-specific differences in both inflammatory and metabolic profiles with increased type I interferon production, mitochondrial respiration, and glycolytic rate in -deficient female BMDMs in comparison to wild-type cells, while no differences were observed between males. Transcriptomics of female and male BMDMs revealed an altered steroid hormone signaling in -deficient cells, and a "masculinization" of -deficient female BMDMs. Thus, our findings suggest that NLRX1 prevents uncontrolled inflammation and metabolism in females and therefore may contribute to the sex differences observed in infectious and inflammatory diseases.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9150262PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.882867DOI Listing

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