Biological Sex Influences Human Bystander CD8 T Cell Activation.

Publication date: Jun 01, 2025

The recent COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted a significant sex bias in disease outcome, where male sex is associated with greater disease severity and mortality. Interestingly, studies have also identified a role for antigen-independent “bystander-activated” CD8 T cells in the severity of COVID-19 and other viral infections. However, whether biological sex contributes to the magnitude of bystander T cell activation has not been investigated. To assess sex differences in bystander CD8 T cell activation, we isolated PBMCs from age-matched male and female donors and stimulated the cells with cytokines IL-12/15/18 to induce bystander T cell activation. Male CD8 T cells stimulated with IL-15 exhibited greater bystander activation, including increased NKG2D expression and greater antigen-independent cytotoxicity against tumor cells compared with female CD8 T cells. In contrast, IL-12/18 and IL-12/15/18 stimulation of CD8 T cells did not reveal evidence of sex differences in bystander IFN-γ production. Our data suggest that underlying sex differences in bystander CD8 T cell activation and cytotoxicity may contribute to the observed sex biases in disease severity of viral infections.

Concepts Keywords
Cd8 Adult
Matched biological sex
Pandemic bystander activation
Tumor Bystander Effect
Viral CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes
CD8+ T cells
COVID-19
Cytotoxicity, Immunologic
Female
Humans
Interferon-gamma
Interferon-gamma
Interleukin-12
Interleukin-12
Interleukin-15
Interleukin-15
KLRK1 protein, human
Lymphocyte Activation
Male
Middle Aged
NKG2D
SARS-CoV-2
Sex Factors

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic
disease IDO role
disease MESH viral infections
disease MESH tumor
disease IDO production
disease IDO protein
disease IDO cell

Original Article

(Visited 7 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *