AI Article Synopsis

  • The relationship between the body and its environment influences vital host-microbiome interactions that affect how diseases differ between sexes, including susceptibility, symptoms, and treatment results.
  • Factors like hormones, immune responses, and genetic differences contribute to these discrepancies and interact throughout a person's life, while the gut microbiome plays a significant role in various body systems.
  • The paper reviews current knowledge on how sex hormones, gut bacteria, and overall health relate to cardiovascular disease differences between genders, highlighting research gaps and the need for a more integrated approach in future studies.

Article Abstract

A unique interplay between body and environment embeds and reflects host-microbiome interactions that contribute to sex-differential disease susceptibility, symptomatology, and treatment outcomes. These differences derive from individual biological factors, such as sex hormone action, sex-divergent immune processes, X-linked gene dosage effects, and epigenetics, as well as from their interaction across the lifespan. The gut microbiome is increasingly recognized as a moderator of several body systems that are thus impacted by its function and composition. In humans, biological sex components further interact with gender-specific exposures such as dietary preferences, stressors, and life experiences to form a complex whole, requiring innovative methodologies to disentangle. Here, we summarize current knowledge of the interactions among sex hormones, gut microbiota, immune system, and vascular health and their relevance for sex-differential epidemiology of cardiovascular diseases. We outline clinical implications, identify knowledge gaps, and place emphasis on required future studies to address these gaps. In addition, we provide an overview of the caveats associated with conducting cardiovascular research that require consideration of sex/gender differences. While previous work has inspected several of these components separately, here we call attention to further translational utility of a combined perspective from cardiovascular translational research, gender medicine, and microbiome systems biology.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/apha.14228DOI Listing

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