2019
DOI: 10.1186/s13293-019-0259-1
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The developmental origins of sex-biased expression in cardiac development

Abstract: Background Expression patterns between males and females vary in every adult tissue, even in organs with no conspicuous dimorphisms such as the heart. While studies of male and female differences have traditionally focused on the influence of sex hormones, these do not account for all the differences at the molecular and epigenetic levels. We previously reported that a substantial number of genes were differentially expressed in male and female mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells and revealed dose-dep… Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(42 citation statements)
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“…Some of proposed miRNA biomarkers of AAA have already been connected to sex differences in humans ( Table A2 in Appendix D ), suggesting that deregulation of these miRNAs may reflect gender differences occurring between AAA and control group. In the case of gene expression, comparison of Deegan et al paper [ 61 ] draw only five overlapping genes, suggesting minor gender bias, while from [ 62 ] there were no such ones ( Table A3 in Appendix E ). Interestingly, Cui et al discovered that blood is poor material for distinguishing sex associated transcriptome patterns due to relative invariability between genders [ 63 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Some of proposed miRNA biomarkers of AAA have already been connected to sex differences in humans ( Table A2 in Appendix D ), suggesting that deregulation of these miRNAs may reflect gender differences occurring between AAA and control group. In the case of gene expression, comparison of Deegan et al paper [ 61 ] draw only five overlapping genes, suggesting minor gender bias, while from [ 62 ] there were no such ones ( Table A3 in Appendix E ). Interestingly, Cui et al discovered that blood is poor material for distinguishing sex associated transcriptome patterns due to relative invariability between genders [ 63 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“… No. Gene Symbol Association with Gender Association with Smoking [ 61 ] 1 [ 62 ] [ 113 ] 2 [ 114 ] 3 [ 115 ] 4 [ 116 ] 5 [ 117 ] 5 [ 118 ] 5 [ 119 ] [ 120 ] Upregulated genes 1 CPT1A no no no no no no no no no no 2 GGT1 no no no no no no no no no no 3 …”
Section: Abdominal Aorta Aneurysm and Control Groups Constructionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, comparisons of females with different genetic sex (XX.F vs. XY.F) yield very few DEGs ( Figure 5 a). This rather limited the influence of the sex-chromosome complement on the liver transcriptome is in striking contrast to its prominent effects on intestinal lipid metabolism [ 75 ], the transcriptomes of the mouse thymus [ 2 ] and heart [ 7 ], or the methylation and expression patterns in human blood cells [ 4 , 15 ]. There is also a remarkable difference between autosomal and X-linked sDMR with respect to their relationship with DEGs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In general, more DEGs were detected in comparisons between groups with different phenotypic sex (XX.F vs. XY.M and XY.F vs. XY.M) than between groups with the same phenotypic sex, but different sex-chromosome complements (XX Paf .F vs. XO.F and XX.F vs. XY.F), which is consistent with the relative numbers of sDMR detected. Larger portions of DEGs showed lower expression levels on chromosome 5,7,10,12,15,19, and X in males in the XX.F versus XY.M and XY.F versus XY.M comparisons, while DEGs on Y chromosomes all were detected only in Y chromosome carriers in both XX.F versus XY.M and XX.F versus XY.F comparisons (Figure 5a). Out of the 290 DEGs in the XX.F versus XY.M comparison, 172 overlapped with DEGs in the XY.F versus XY.M, 14 with the XX.F versus XY.F, and 2 with the XX Paf .F versus XO.F (Figure 5b).…”
Section: Association Between Sex-associated Methylation and The Transmentioning
confidence: 99%
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