29 research outputs found
Gender-specific differences in hypothalamus–pituitary–adrenal axis activity during childhood: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Influences on the pharmacokinetics of oxycodone: a multicentre cross-sectional study in 439 adult cancer patients
Transcriptional Profiling of Human Liver Identifies Sex-Biased Genes Associated with Polygenic Dyslipidemia and Coronary Artery Disease
Sex-differences in human liver gene expression were characterized on a genome-wide scale using a large liver sample collection, allowing for detection of small expression differences with high statistical power. 1,249 sex-biased genes were identified, 70% showing higher expression in females. Chromosomal bias was apparent, with female-biased genes enriched on chrX and male-biased genes enriched on chrY and chr19, where 11 male-biased zinc-finger KRAB-repressor domain genes are distributed in six clusters. Top biological functions and diseases significantly enriched in sex-biased genes include transcription, chromatin organization and modification, sexual reproduction, lipid metabolism and cardiovascular disease. Notably, sex-biased genes are enriched at loci associated with polygenic dyslipidemia and coronary artery disease in genome-wide association studies. Moreover, of the 8 sex-biased genes at these loci, 4 have been directly linked to monogenic disorders of lipid metabolism and show an expression profile in females (elevated expression of ABCA1, APOA5 and LDLR; reduced expression of LIPC) that is consistent with the lower female risk of coronary artery disease. Female-biased expression was also observed for CYP7A1, which is activated by drugs used to treat hypercholesterolemia. Several sex-biased drug-metabolizing enzyme genes were identified, including members of the CYP, UGT, GPX and ALDH families. Half of 879 mouse orthologs, including many genes of lipid metabolism and homeostasis, show growth hormone-regulated sex-biased expression in mouse liver, suggesting growth hormone might play a similar regulatory role in human liver. Finally, the evolutionary rate of protein coding regions for human-mouse orthologs, revealed by dN/dS ratio, is significantly higher for genes showing the same sex-bias in both species than for non-sex-biased genes. These findings establish that human hepatic sex differences are widespread and affect diverse cell metabolic processes, and may help explain sex differences in lipid profiles associated with sex differential risk of coronary artery disease
Sex Differences in the Blood Concentration of Tacrolimus in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients with CYP3A5*3/*3
Genetic Background and Sex: Impact on Generalizability of Research Findings in Pharmacology Studies
Animal models consisting of inbred laboratory rodent strains have been a powerful tool for decades, helping to unravel the underpinnings of biological problems and employed to evaluate potential therapeutic treatments in drug discovery. While inbred strains demonstrate relatively reliable and predictable responses, using a single inbred strain alone or as a background to a mutation is analogous to running a clinical trial in a single individual and their identical twins. Indeed, complex etiologies drive the most common human diseases, and a single inbred strain that is a surrogate of a single genome, or data generated from a single sex, is not representative of the genetically diverse patient populations. Further, pharmacological and toxicology data generated in otherwise healthy animals may not translate to disease states where physiology, metabolism, and general health are compromised. The purpose of this chapter is to provide guidance for improving generalizability of preclinical studies by providing insight into necessary considerations for introducing systematic variation within the study design, such as genetic diversity, the use of both sexes, and selection of appropriate age and disease model. The outcome of implementing these considerations should be that reproducibility and generalizability of significant results are significantly enhanced leading to improved clinical translation
Interindividual variability and tissue-specificity in the expression of cytochrome P450 3A mRNA
The elucidation of the individual contributions of the four CYP3A genes to the overall CYP3A activity has been hampered by similarities in their sequence and function. We investigated the expression of CYP3A mRNA species in the liver and in various other tissues using gene-specific TaqMan probes. CYP3A4 transcripts were the most abundant CYP3A mRNA in each of the 63 white European livers tested and accounted on average for 95% of the combined CYP3A mRNA pool. CYP3A5 and CYP3A7 each contributed on average 2%, whereas CYP3A43 contributed 0.3% transcripts to this pool. Fourteen percent of livers exhibited an increased share of CYP3A5 transcripts (range 4-20%). These livers were either heterozygous for the marker of the CYP3A5 polymorphism, the CYP3A5 1A allele, or expressed very low levels of CYP3A4 mRNA. The CYP3A7 expression was bimodal, and it was increased in 15% livers. CYP3A4 was the dominant CYP3A in the intestine, followed by CYP3A5. CYP3A5 and CYP3A7, but not CYP3A4, were also expressed in the adrenal gland and in the prostate, whereas only CYP3A5 was detected in the kidney. These three tissues were shown to express much lower levels of pregnane X receptor mRNA than the intestine, indicating possibly a different mode of regulation of CYP3A expression. Expression of CYP3A genes was undetectable in peripheral blood lymphocytes. In summary, these assays and results should aid in our efforts to further dissect the regulation and the physiological and pharmacological significance of CYP3A isozymes
The genetic determinants of the CYP3A5 polymorphism
CYP3A proteins comprise a significant portion of the hepatic cytochrome P450 (CYP) protein and they metabolize aroud 50% of drugs currently in use. The dissection of the individual contributions of the four CYP3A genes identified in humans to overall hepatic CYP3A activity has been hampered by sequence and functional similarities. We have investigated the expression of CYP3A5 and its genetic determinants in a panel of 183 Caucasian liver samples. CYP3A5 expression is increased in 10% of livers in this ethnic group. Using a high density map of CYP3A5 variants, we searched for genetic markers of the increased CYP3A5 expression. In agreement with an independent, recent study, we report that a SNIP within intron 3 (g.6986G>A) is the primary cause of the CYP3A5 protein polymorphism. The frequencies of the g.6986A variant which allow for normal splicing of CYP3A5 transcripts are 5% in Caucasians, 29% in Japanese, 27% in Chinese, 30% in Koreans and 73% in African-Americans. In the last ethnic group, the expression of CYP3A5 in some individuals who carry the g.6986A variant is affected adversely by a frame shift mutation (CYP3A5 7, D348., q=0.10). In summary, these results should add to efforts to identify clinically relevant, CYP3A5-specific reactions and to further elucidate traits responsible for variable expression of the entire CYP3A family. Pharmacogenetics 11:773-779 (C) 2001 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.NIGMS NIH HHS [GM54995
