학술논문

Sex Disparity in Cord Blood FoxP3+ CD4 T Regulatory Cells in Infants Exposed to Malaria In Utero
Document Type
article
Source
Open Forum Infectious Diseases. 4(1)
Subject
Medical Microbiology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Immunology
Rare Diseases
Clinical Research
Malaria
Vector-Borne Diseases
Pediatric
Infectious Diseases
2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment
Aetiology
Infection
Good Health and Well Being
immunity
malaria
sex
T regulatory cells
vaccines
vaccines.
Clinical sciences
Medical microbiology
Language
Abstract
Sex differences in the immune response and in infectious disease susceptibility have been well described, although the mechanisms underlying these differences remain incompletely understood. We evaluated the frequency of cord blood CD4 T cell subsets in a highly malaria-exposed birth cohort of mother-infant pairs in Uganda by sex. We found that frequencies of cord blood regulatory T cell ([Treg] CD4+CD25+FoxP3+CD127lo/-) differed by infant sex, with significantly lower frequencies of Tregs in female than in male neonates (P = .006). When stratified by in utero malaria exposure status, this difference was observed in the exposed, but not in the unexposed infants.