Sex-specific impact of obstructive sleep apnea on peripheral blood mononuclear cells.

Publication date: Dec 04, 2024

Experimental sleep disruption in healthy adults is more deleterious to immune function in females relative to males; however, it remains unknown if this translates to patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Thus, this study explored sex differences in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from patients with untreated OSA. Participants completed sleep studies to identify the presence of OSA via the apnea-hypopnea index (AHI). PBMCs were isolated, cryopreserved, and batch phenotyped via mass cytometry. Females with (n = 6, AHI = 25. 9 +/- 21. 4 events/hr, age = 37 +/- 14yrs, BMI = 30. 5 +/- 7. 4 kg/m) and without (n = 9, AHI = 2. 6 +/- 1. 6 events/hr, age = 35 +/- 10yrs, BMI = 29. 2 +/- 6. 3 kg/m) OSA were compared to males with (n = 7, AHI = 13. 7 +/- 8. 5 events/hr, age = 33 +/- 11yrs, BMI = 30. 0 +/- 4. 8 kg/m) and without (n = 7, AHI = 2. 6 +/- 1. 6 events/hr, age = 33 +/- 10yrs, BMI = 28. 9 +/- 3. 8 kg/m) OSA. No significant group-by-sex interactions were observed in CD3 T cells (p = 0. 273), CD8 T cells (p = 0. 656), B cells (p = 0. 190), monocytes (p = 0. 638), nor granulocytes (p = 0. 267) expressed as a percent of their respective parent population. While the percentage of total NK cells did not differ between groups (group-by-sex p = 0. 822), females with OSA had fewer CD57 (42. 4 +/- 14. 7 vs. 62. 4 +/- 10. 4%) and more CD57 (57. 6 +/- 14. 7 vs. 37. 6 +/- 10. 4%) NK cells than females without OSA (p 

Concepts Keywords
3714yrs Adult
4kg Female
Females Humans
Sleep Hypoxia
Leukocytes, Mononuclear
Male
Middle Aged
Natural killer cell
Polysomnography
Regulatory T cell
Sex Factors
Sleep apnea
Sleep Apnea, Obstructive

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH obstructive sleep apnea
disease IDO blood
disease MESH Hypoxia
disease IDO cell
disease MESH Sleep apnea

Original Article

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