iScience (Aug 2022)

Sex-biased adaptive immune regulation in cancer development and therapy

  • Johanna M. Schafer,
  • Tong Xiao,
  • Hyunwoo Kwon,
  • Katharine Collier,
  • Yuzhou Chang,
  • Hany Abdel-Hafiz,
  • Chelsea Bolyard,
  • Dongjun Chung,
  • Yuanquan Yang,
  • Debasish Sundi,
  • Qin Ma,
  • Dan Theodorescu,
  • Xue Li,
  • Zihai Li

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 8
p. 104717

Abstract

Read online

Summary: The cancer research field is finally starting to unravel the mystery behind why males have a higher incidence and mortality rate than females for nearly all cancer types of the non-reproductive systems. Here, we explain how sex – specifically sex chromosomes and sex hormones – drives differential adaptive immunity across immune-related disease states including cancer, and why males are consequently more predisposed to tumor development. We highlight emerging data on the roles of cell-intrinsic androgen receptors in driving CD8+ T cell dysfunction or exhaustion in the tumor microenvironment and summarize ongoing clinical efforts to determine the impact of androgen blockade on cancer immunotherapy. Finally, we outline a framework for future research in cancer biology and immuno-oncology, underscoring the importance of a holistic research approach to understanding the mechanisms of sex dimorphisms in cancer, so sex will be considered as an imperative factor for guiding treatment decisions in the future.

Keywords