Testosterone exacerbates neutrophilia and cardiac injury in myocardial infarction via actions in bone marrow

Men develop larger infarct sizes than women after a myocardial infarction (MI), but the mechanism underlying this sex difference is unknown. Here, we demonstrated that blood neutrophil counts post-MI were higher in male than female mice. Castration-induced testosterone deficiency reduced blood neutr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2025-02, Vol.16 (1), p.1142-16, Article 1142
Hauptverfasser: Svedlund Eriksson, Elin, Lantero Rodriguez, Marta, Halvorsen, Bente, Johansson, Inger, Mårtensson, Anna K. F., Wilhelmson, Anna S., Huse, Camilla, Ueland, Thor, Aukrust, Pål, Broch, Kaspar, Gullestad, Lars, Amundsen, Brage Høyem, Andersen, Geir Øystein, Karlsson, Mikael C. I., Hagberg Thulin, Malin, Camponeschi, Alessandro, Trompet, Dana, Hammarsten, Ola, Redfors, Björn, Borén, Jan, Omerovic, Elmir, Levin, Malin C., Chagin, Andrei S., Dahl, Tuva B., Tivesten, Åsa
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Men develop larger infarct sizes than women after a myocardial infarction (MI), but the mechanism underlying this sex difference is unknown. Here, we demonstrated that blood neutrophil counts post-MI were higher in male than female mice. Castration-induced testosterone deficiency reduced blood neutrophil counts to the level in females and increased survival post-MI. These effects were mimicked by Osterix-directed ablation of the androgen receptor in bone marrow (BM). Mechanistically, androgens downregulated the leukocyte retention factor CXCL12 in BM stromal cells. Post-hoc analysis of clinical trial data showed that neutrophilia was greater in men than women after reperfusion of first-time ST-elevation MI, and tocilizumab, an interleukin-6 receptor inhibitor, reduced blood neutrophil counts and infarct size to a greater extent in men than women. Our work reveals a previously unknown mechanism connecting testosterone with neutrophilia and MI injury via BM and identifies the importance of considering sex when developing anti-inflammatory strategies to treat MI. Men develop larger myocardial infarction (MI) sizes than women. Here, the authors show that male sex and testosterone, via bone marrow stroma, exacerbates MI-induced neutrophilia and cardiac injury and that response to anti-inflammatory treatment in MI is greater in men than women
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-025-56217-x