Abstract
Major sex differences are observed in the prevalence, intensity, and severity of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. Here, we investigated degranulation activity of circulating and intrahepatic natural killer (NK) cells from HBV and HCV chronically infected patients before any treatment (n=125). The frequency of CD107+ NK cells in the female liver was significantly higher compared to that in males during chronic HBV infection (p=0.002) and correlated with the plasma levels of estradiol (correlation coefficient r=0.634; p<0.0001). Our results clearly show sex differences in degranulation activity of intrahepatic NK cells of HBV-infected patients. This probably contributes to the ability of females to better deal with HBV disease.
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CITATION STYLE
MacEk Jilkova, Z., Decaens, T., Marlu, A., Marche, H., Jouvin-Marche, E., & Marche, P. N. (2017). Sex Differences in Spontaneous Degranulation Activity of Intrahepatic Natural Killer Cells during Chronic Hepatitis B: Association with Estradiol Levels. Mediators of Inflammation, 2017. https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/3214917
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