Respiratory Conditions

Why Do Women Get Asthma More Frequently than Men?

The effects of sex hormones on lung cells may be causing women to have asthma at twice the rate of men, according to researchers from Vanderbilt University and Johns Hopkins. The investigators found that testosterone hindered a cell linked to asthma symptoms such as inflammation and mucus production in the lungs.

The study, which analyzed human cells and rodents, was published November 28, 2017 in the journal Cell Reports.

“When we started this study, we really thought that ovarian hormones would increase inflammation, more so than testosterone making it better,” says senior author Dawn Newcomb, of the Vanderbilt University Medical Center. “I was surprised to see that testosterone was more important in reducing inflammation.”

Prior studies have found that, before puberty, boys have approximately 1.5 times higher rate of asthma than girls. That trend reverses after puberty, when women are twice likely to have asthma as men. This pattern continues until women hit menopause, and then the asthma rates in women start to decline. Increased asthma symptoms are regulated by many different factors, including exposure to allergens and viral infections, and the researchers suspected that sex hormones might also be involved.

Newcomb and her colleagues looked at human and mouse cells to further study the trend in gender differences that they had observed. They focused on lung cells called Group 2 innate lymphoid cells, or ILC2 cells. These cells make cytokines, proteins that cause inflammation and mucus production in the lungs, which makes it harder to breathe. The researchers collected blood from people with and without asthma and found that those with asthma had more ILC2 cells than those without. Of that group, asthmatic women had more ILC2 cells than asthmatic men.

ILC2 cells are also found in the lungs of mice, but they are rare. They make up only about 10,000 of the 10 million cells in a mouse lung. Similar to the results that they discovered in humans, Newcomb and colleagues always found that they were getting fewer cells from male mice than female mice. They used these mouse cells to experiment with the effects of hormones on ILC2 cells.

When the researchers added ovarian hormones, like estrogen and progesterone, to the ILC2 cells, they did not see much of a change or increase in the ability of the cell to make cytokines. However, when they added testosterone, they saw that the hormone prevented the cells from expanding and reduced the production of cytokines.

While this study focused on testosterone, Newcomb hopes to expand further studies to explore the effects of more sex hormones on asthma. “Sex hormones are not the only mechanism but, rather, one of many mechanisms that could be regulating airway inflammation,” she says. “This is not the only important mechanism in asthma.”

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