How Does Biological Sex Impact Mucosal Bacterial Infection? Mucosal Defenses and Bacterial Detection
Laura Ramirez Finn, Molly A. Ingersoll

TL;DR
This paper explores how biological sex influences mucosal defenses and immune responses during bacterial infections, focusing on urinary tract infections.
Contribution
The study highlights the lack of research on sex differences in mucosal barriers and immune responses during bacterial infections.
Findings
Sex disparities exist in urinary tract infection incidence and immune response.
There is limited understanding of how biological sex affects bladder mucus in homeostasis and infection.
Sex steroid hormone signaling may influence innate immunity and bacterial detection differences between sexes.
Abstract
Urinary tract infections possess substantial sex disparities in the incidence, immune response, and progression of infection. Some of these distinctions may be due to sexual dimorphism in mucosal barriers or sex differences in the initial immune response to infection. Mucosal organs are protected by a mucus barrier, however, there is little knowledge of the impact of biological sex on this layer in homeostasis and infection. Notably, despite the incidence of infection, there is a paucity of even fundamental research on bladder mucus in homeostasis and infectious disease. When bacteria encounter mucosal epithelia, they must bind and potentially invade these surfaces to initiate an infection. Whether differences in mucosal epithelia have an impact on bacterial‐epithelial interactions between the sexes is not known. When bacteria are sensed by the host, they initiate transcription factor…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUrinary Tract Infections Management · Reproductive tract infections research · Antimicrobial Peptides and Activities
