A new way of understanding sex-biased diseases has been developed by scientists at UC San Francisco (UCSF). Their evolutionary biology-based theory, published in in Science, is that males and females took opposing paths in a trade-off between immunity and metabolism that happens in the liver. This helped males fight bacterial infections from wounds received in dominance fights, while helping females store subcutaneous fat to survive when food is scarce.
Working with mice, the scientists described the activity of a signalling pathway that regulates lipids, storing fat in the liver in males and releasing it into the bloodstream in females. This pathway also responds to growth hormone.
This phenomenon may have shaped male biology in ways that increase risk from modern, high-calorie diets. The findings are particularly important for fatty liver, which affects a quarter of the US population. It is seen predominantly in men until women reach menopause.
“Scientists have only recently started to understand there are these profound differences between males and females,” said Holly Ingraham, PhD, UCSF professor and co-senior author of the study. “Understanding these differences is going to be the key to unlocking therapeutics for sex-biased diseases. Fatty liver is one example.”
The experiments found that male mice were three times more likely than females to survive infection with E. coli. The females developed hyperlipidaemia, a condition that is also seen in humans with severe sepsis. Lowering their lipid levels helped them to survive.
The investigators then examined how males and females respond to the contemporary environmental challenge of overeating by feeding the mice high-fat chow. males developed fatty liver and glucose intolerance, but females did not. This was true even when males and females gained a similar amount of weight.
Searching the literature for something that could explain this, the team identified a transcription factor called BCL6, which prevents the breakdown of fat in the liver and is much more present in male mice.
Deleting the gene for this protein eliminated liver fat in the males, and also their ability to survive the infection.
“The host defence programs in the liver are the predisposing factors that drive fatty liver in males,” said Joni Nikkanen, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow and one of the study researchers.
“We have an evolutionary perspective on why such programs have developed — because they protect males against bacterial infections,” he said. “But in another context, these same programs are not good for you anymore, and you will develop more severe fatty liver.”
The team also examined how the presence of BCL6 affected gene expression in the liver. This process begins at puberty when males produce more testosterone, and their pituitary glands start to secrete growth hormone in sharp peaks and valleys.
These intermittent bursts, likely testosterone-regulated, are important. When researchers infused male mice continuously with growth hormone the way it is secreted in females, BCL6 disappeared from their livers, and they lost the ability to fight E. coli infection.
The results point to growth hormone as a potential therapy for adults with fatty liver disease, an idea that is currently being tested. Its effects are already well established in children whose pituitaries don’t produce enough growth hormone. Male children especially tend to develop fatty liver, but it goes away when they are given growth hormone to treat their short stature.
The work also expands the scientific view of how the body fights infection to include organs like the liver.
“The fight is still between the infection and the immune system,” said Omer Gokcumen, PhD, an evolutionary anthropologist at the University at Buffalo and a co-author of the study. “But the liver is determining the battlefield.”