La Trobe

Cardiac cellularity is dependent upon biological sex and is regulated by gonadal hormones

journal contribution
posted on 2024-12-18, 00:13 authored by Galen T Squiers, Micheal A McLellan, Alexei Ilinykh, Jane Branca, Nadia A Rosenthal, Ruvantha PintoRuvantha Pinto

Aims: Sex differences have been consistently identified in cardiac physiology and incidence of cardiac disease. However, the underlying biological causes for the differences remain unclear. We sought to characterize the cardiac non-myocyte cellular landscape in female and male hearts to determine whether cellular proportion of the heart is sex-dependent and whether endocrine factors modulate the cardiac cell proportions.

Methods and results: Utilizing high-dimensional flow cytometry and immunofluorescence imaging, we found significant sex-specific differences in cellular composition of the heart in adult and juvenile mice, that develops postnatally. Removal of systemic gonadal hormones by gonadectomy results in rapid sex-specific changes in cardiac non-myocyte cellular proportions including alteration in resident mesenchymal cell and leucocyte populations, indicating gonadal hormones and their downstream targets regulate cardiac cellular composition. The ectopic reintroduction of oestrogen and testosterone to female and male mice, respectively, reverses many of these gonadectomy-induced compositional changes.

Conclusion: This work shows that the constituent cell types of the mouse heart are hormone-dependent and that the cardiac cellular landscapes are distinct in females and males, remain plastic, and can be rapidly modulated by endocrine factors. These observations have implications for strategies aiming to therapeutically alter cardiac cellular heterogeneity and underscore the importance of considering biological sex for studies examining cardiac physiology and stress responses.

Funding

This work is supported by National Health and Medical Research Council Ideas Grant (GNT1188503) to A.R.P. JAX Cores are supported by the Jackson Laboratory Cancer Center Core grant and the Leducq Foundation Transatlantic Network of Excellence in Cardiac Research (P30 CA034196) to N.A.R. The Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute is supported by grants from the State Government of Victoria and the Australian Government.

History

Publication Date

2021-09-01

Journal

Cardiovascular Research

Volume

117

Issue

10

Pagination

11p. (p. 2252-2262)

Publisher

Oxford University Press

ISSN

0008-6363

Rights Statement

© The Authors 2020. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com

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