When it comes to COVID-19, women seem to be the stronger sex, suffering severe disease at about half the rate as men, but the reason for this has been elusive.
Now a chance experiment by an ophthalmology researcher at Duke Health has led to an insight: Women have more of a certain type of immune cell that fights infections in mucosal tissue, and these immune cells amass in the lungs, poised to attack the SARS-CoV-2 virus, according to a news release from Duke Health.
“Better armed with these specialized immune cells, women appear to be more equipped to fight some of the most severe impacts of COVID-19, notably the respiratory infections that can become life-threatening,” said Daniel Saban, PhD, Associate Professor in Duke’s Department of Ophthalmology and in the Department of Immunology.
Saban, who led the study that appears online in the Cell Press journal Med, said the investigation began last spring as COVID-19 first spread and he was sidelined from his normal caseload studying eye diseases. A piece of equipment in his lab – a device that can perform 36-color flow cytometry – was sitting idle, so he decided to use it to examine blood samples from COVID-19 patients.
Saban and the members of his lab quickly saw that a white blood cell called mucosal associated invariant T cells, or MAIT cell, circulated more abundantly in the blood from healthy women compared to healthy men. MAIT cells are highly specialized white blood cells that contribute to immune defenses in mucosal organs and tissues.
Among COVID-19 patients, however, there were few MAIT cells circulating in the blood, even among women, where the population of MAIT cells radically fell off, leading the researchers to question where these cells had gone.
They found their answer in tissue samples from the lungs of COVID-19 patients. Overall, there were an abundance of MAIT cells in the lung tissue of people with COVID-19, but upon closer inspection, they found night-and-day differences between the sexes.
“We first found this dichotomy in healthy blood,” Saban said. “Circulating MAIT cells in women expressed genes indicative of a robust profile poised for fighting an infection, but this was not the case in males. Then we looked in the tissue and were able to find evidence of this same pattern by sex.”