4.7 Article

Acetaminophen-Induced Liver Injury Exposes Murine IL-22 as Sex-Related Gene Product

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms221910623

Keywords

interleukin-22; inflammation; testosterone; sex; gender; acetaminophen; liver damage

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [DFG MU 1284/6-2]
  2. (Institute of General Pharmacology and Toxicology)

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This study investigates the role of IL-22 in female mice with acetaminophen-induced liver injury, demonstrating that testosterone and dihydrotestosterone can reduce IL-22 production in female splenocytes. The findings suggest a potential explanation for the increased IL-22 in female mice and splenocytes during inflammatory activation, and highlight the immunosuppressive effects of androgens in males.
Gaining detailed knowledge about sex-related immunoregulation remains a crucial prerequisite for the development of adequate disease models and therapeutic strategies enabling personalized medicine. Here, the key parameter of the production of cytokines mediating disease resolution was investigated. Among these cytokines, STAT3-activating interleukin (IL)-22 is principally associated with recovery from tissue injury. By investigating paradigmatic acetaminophen-induced liver injury, we demonstrated that IL-22 expression is enhanced in female mice. Increased female IL-22 was confirmed at a cellular level using murine splenocytes stimulated by lipopolysaccharide or alpha CD3/CD28 to model innate or adaptive immunoactivation. Interestingly, testosterone or dihydrotestosterone reduced IL-22 production by female but not by male splenocytes. Mechanistic studies on PMA/PHA-stimulated T-cell-lymphoma EL-4 cells verified the capability of testosterone/dihydrotestosterone to reduce IL-22 production. Moreover, we demonstrated by chromatin immunoprecipitation that testosterone impairs binding of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor to xenobiotic responsive elements within the murine IL-22 promoter. Overall, female mice undergoing acute liver injury and cultured female splenocytes upon inflammatory activation display increased IL-22. This observation is likely related to the immunosuppressive effects of androgens in males. The data presented concur with more pronounced immunological alertness demonstrable in females, which may relate to the sex-specific course of some immunological disorders.

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