Cancers (Nov 2022)

Sex Biases in Cancer and Autoimmune Disease Incidence Are Strongly Positively Correlated with Mitochondrial Gene Expression across Human Tissues

  • David R. Crawford,
  • Sanju Sinha,
  • Nishanth Ulhas Nair,
  • Bríd M. Ryan,
  • Jill S. Barnholtz-Sloan,
  • Stephen M. Mount,
  • Ayelet Erez,
  • Kenneth Aldape,
  • Philip E. Castle,
  • Padma S. Rajagopal,
  • Chi-Ping Day,
  • Alejandro A. Schäffer,
  • Eytan Ruppin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14235885
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 23
p. 5885

Abstract

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Cancer occurs more frequently in men while autoimmune diseases (AIDs) occur more frequently in women. To explore whether these sex biases have a common basis, we collected 167 AID incidence studies from many countries for tissues that have both a cancer type and an AID that arise from that tissue. Analyzing a total of 182 country-specific, tissue-matched cancer-AID incidence rate sex bias data pairs, we find that, indeed, the sex biases observed in the incidence of AIDs and cancers that occur in the same tissue are positively correlated across human tissues. The common key factor whose levels across human tissues are most strongly associated with these incidence rate sex biases is the sex bias in the expression of the 37 genes encoded in the mitochondrial genome.

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