Sexual Dimorphism in Glucocorticoid Stress Response

Chronic stress is encountered in our everyday life and is thought to contribute to a number of diseases. Many of these stress-related disorders display a sex bias. Because glucocorticoid hormones are the main biological mediator of chronic stress, researchers have been interested in understanding th...

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Main Author: Marie-Pierre Moisan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-03-01
Series:International Journal of Molecular Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/22/6/3139
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spelling doaj-0a8a677f4c9540048845d240572c23552021-03-20T00:02:44ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences1661-65961422-00672021-03-01223139313910.3390/ijms22063139Sexual Dimorphism in Glucocorticoid Stress ResponseMarie-Pierre Moisan0Université Bordeaux, INRAE, UMR1286, Nutrineuro, 33076 Bordeaux, FranceChronic stress is encountered in our everyday life and is thought to contribute to a number of diseases. Many of these stress-related disorders display a sex bias. Because glucocorticoid hormones are the main biological mediator of chronic stress, researchers have been interested in understanding the sexual dimorphism in glucocorticoid stress response to better explain the sex bias in stress-related diseases. Although not yet demonstrated for glucocorticoid regulation, sex chromosomes do influence sex-specific biology as soon as conception. Then a transient rise in testosterone start to shape the male brain during the prenatal period differently to the female brain. These organizational effects are completed just before puberty. The cerebral regions implicated in glucocorticoid regulation at rest and after stress are thereby impacted in a sex-specific manner. After puberty, the high levels of all gonadal hormones will interact with glucocorticoid hormones in specific crosstalk through their respective nuclear receptors. In addition, stress occurring early in life, in particular during the prenatal period and in adolescence will prime in the long-term glucocorticoid stress response through epigenetic mechanisms, again in a sex-specific manner. Altogether, various molecular mechanisms explain sex-specific glucocorticoid stress responses that do not exclude important gender effects in humans.https://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/22/6/3139sex dimorphismglucocorticoidstresscortisolsteroids
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marie-Pierre Moisan
spellingShingle Marie-Pierre Moisan
Sexual Dimorphism in Glucocorticoid Stress Response
International Journal of Molecular Sciences
sex dimorphism
glucocorticoid
stress
cortisol
steroids
author_facet Marie-Pierre Moisan
author_sort Marie-Pierre Moisan
title Sexual Dimorphism in Glucocorticoid Stress Response
title_short Sexual Dimorphism in Glucocorticoid Stress Response
title_full Sexual Dimorphism in Glucocorticoid Stress Response
title_fullStr Sexual Dimorphism in Glucocorticoid Stress Response
title_full_unstemmed Sexual Dimorphism in Glucocorticoid Stress Response
title_sort sexual dimorphism in glucocorticoid stress response
publisher MDPI AG
series International Journal of Molecular Sciences
issn 1661-6596
1422-0067
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Chronic stress is encountered in our everyday life and is thought to contribute to a number of diseases. Many of these stress-related disorders display a sex bias. Because glucocorticoid hormones are the main biological mediator of chronic stress, researchers have been interested in understanding the sexual dimorphism in glucocorticoid stress response to better explain the sex bias in stress-related diseases. Although not yet demonstrated for glucocorticoid regulation, sex chromosomes do influence sex-specific biology as soon as conception. Then a transient rise in testosterone start to shape the male brain during the prenatal period differently to the female brain. These organizational effects are completed just before puberty. The cerebral regions implicated in glucocorticoid regulation at rest and after stress are thereby impacted in a sex-specific manner. After puberty, the high levels of all gonadal hormones will interact with glucocorticoid hormones in specific crosstalk through their respective nuclear receptors. In addition, stress occurring early in life, in particular during the prenatal period and in adolescence will prime in the long-term glucocorticoid stress response through epigenetic mechanisms, again in a sex-specific manner. Altogether, various molecular mechanisms explain sex-specific glucocorticoid stress responses that do not exclude important gender effects in humans.
topic sex dimorphism
glucocorticoid
stress
cortisol
steroids
url https://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/22/6/3139
work_keys_str_mv AT mariepierremoisan sexualdimorphisminglucocorticoidstressresponse
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