cover of episode The Unsilencing

The Unsilencing

2021/8/26
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The episode explores the prevalence of autoimmune disorders in women and the sex differences in disease incidence, focusing on the role of the immune system and genetic factors.

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Yeah.

Wait, you're listening? Okay. All right. Okay. Okay.

You're listening to Radiolab. Radiolab. From WNYC. See? Could I ask when this might air? Yeah. I'm four months pregnant today. Congratulations. And I just got a call. Yeah, no, it's super exciting. And I was diagnosed with Hashimoto's. Oh.

Six months ago. So it was just like... Wait, is Hashimoto's an autoimmune disorder? It is. Huh. Yeah.

I'm Molly Webster. And I'm Lulu Miller. This is Radiolab. And today we are looking into one of the biggest medical mysteries, which is why a body sometimes turns on itself. And Molls, you're going to lead us through this one? Yeah. And it's something I got pulled into when I first was working on gonads. Gonads. Gonads.

For anyone who hasn't listened, is the romp through sex freaking ed. You didn't know. You didn't know. What was the actual tagline? The parts of us that make more of us. The parts of us that make more of us. That's good.

So gonads was all about like sex development, right? So I was like deep in X's and Y's and when do we kind of divide off on these paths that are called, you know, gender in like the top level world. And while I was in that space, one of the things that came up was that there are

sex differences in how we get diseases. And one of the places this is like very apparent is in autoimmune disorders. It's very puzzling. Why does autoimmune disease occur eight times more often in women than men? Is it that big of a difference? For rheumatoid arthritis, it is. Yeah. Wow.

Wow. And of course, in MS, it's two-thirds to three-fourths. Hashimoto's disease, 95% are women. That's like almost the entire case study. Yeah. Isn't that crazy? Wow. So I just, I fell into this like series of conversations with...

Interestingly, like very provocative women, scientists who are like trying to answer this. And we're going to circle back to each of them. But first, little basics in autoimmune disorders, your immune system, it starts attacking you.

And there's like various ways it can do that. It can be anything from you have skin rashes to patchy skin to infertility to you have neurodegenerative like MS. It like breaks down your brain and your nerves. So you end up having trouble walking and cognition. Some of them you die earlier from. Some of them, you know, are just like an itchy patch on your skin. So it really is the gamut.

And honestly, on top of all this, it seems like incidences of autoimmune disorders are going up. And so you have this real question of like, why? Yeah. Like what's happening here? So this has to be this has to be genetics. This has to be the genetics.

And so, Lulu Miller, we are going on a journey. Okay. Go to the bathroom now. We have three stops to get through, starting with... Montserrat Anguera, an immunologist. And I'm at the University of Pennsylvania. And her way into this mess is by looking at one of the most well-known chromosomes. I'm absolutely fascinated by the X chromosome. I love this chromosome. And... That sounds so silly, doesn't it? No. No.

And while we all know this chromosome for sex, Montserrat knows it for this other thing. The X chromosome has the highest density of immune-related genes of all the chromosomes. Oh my gosh. And so now this is interesting because everyone on the planet has one X, but typical females have two.

And so Montserrat wondered, like, could there be something going on with this extra X packed with all of these immunity genes that's leading females to get autoimmune disorders more? Exactly. Exactly. Now, traditional wisdom is that if you have a second X or a third or a fourth, it will get turned off or something called silenced.

50% of the cells are going to silence mom's X. The other 50% are going to silence dad's X. And the way it does this is actually a really physical process because wrapped around any extra X are these long strands of RNA. We can look using a microscope at the nucleus of a cell and we can use probes that are specific for the long non-coding RNA and we can light them up in pink.

And what we see is that RNA will form this beautiful cotton candy cloud structure that completely envelops the inactive X chromosome. Wow, so it's like muzzled.

Yeah, it's like, it's like, yes, swaddled. It's absolutely beautiful. Beautiful and scientists assumed durable. The thought was, is that once an X was silenced and this starts in an embryo, it would stay silent. Absolutely. And not just that, experiments have shown that in cells where this doesn't happen, the cell will just start to like die.

So Montserrat was like, OK, I'm just going to take a look at this extra X and see what's going on. So in lupus, 85 percent of patients are women. And so she looked inside cells, immune cells of people with lupus. And what she saw. No cotton candy cloud.

Instead of being the fluffy cotton candy on the inactive X chromosome, they had dispersed patterns of RNA. When she looked inside, she saw little pinpoints of hot pink all over the nucleus. Whoa. So it's not muzzling. It's like shredded, evaporated. It's just all around. Right. Okay. Okay.

And so it's like, what does this mean? What Montserrat is thinking is that maybe this X being unsilenced is allowing extra immune genes to turn on, which is throwing the immune system into like this turbo charge. And that could be contributing to autoimmune disorders. Wow. So she's saying more X is able to...

Unsilenced means more genes firing off? Yeah. Obviously, there's a ton more research to do. And this is just a working hypothesis. But there's one more piece to this, which is that as she was seeing these Xs become unsilenced, she was just like, huh, you know what? I'm going to poke around in the cells of healthy folks, too, in their immune cells.

And she found that in those cells also Xs can sometimes get unsilenced. So is that like a pre-warning sign that they might be about to get sick? Not necessarily because like 30,000 things contribute to autoimmune disorders, but it might account for this other pretty rad sex difference you see in humans. Okay. Which is that if you just look at like stereotypical females and males...

who are healthy. On the baseline, females have stronger immune systems than males. Okay, so you are sitting next to Soren. You're like, you're on guard. You're ready to fight. I mean, does that then, does that reflect in those disparities? Like, do men have more, like, think, like, I don't know, viruses? Well, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, this is why the COVID numbers are so skewed.

Right. The guys have three times greater likelihood of going into the ICU and they have a greater chance of dying than women. Is that why? I mean, it's not like lifestyle. Part of it really may be a part of the puzzle. Part of the puzzle of why is just that like women have stronger immune systems that do stronger initial responses and so can often fight back viruses or bacteria better. Right.

Do people know this? Like, is this... That's so... That's so cool. Like, women just run around with better immune systems all the time. On any given day, a female walking around on the street is ready to fight off a pathogen in a way that, like, men...

It's just I'm picturing like spears like, like we just got this whole army that men are like, like their warriors are like filing their toenails and like. Yeah. And you're like, this is such a crazy, cool superpower. And then.

And then and then I have this like one moment where I'm like, I will get less flu, but I may get rheumatoid arthritis. Like so there's like this. Right. There's always that whole evolution trade off thing. You can't just get a gift. It seems that is true. It is very hard to be excited about the superpower if you are worried about the back end of it. I'm just going to think about my little toxic exes inside of me. They're a little ticking time bomb. Yeah. Yeah.

I don't know why I'm giggling. That just is not what I expected. It struck me as funny. Okay. Yeah. When Radiolab comes back, we are going to learn how the heck we got here and a possible way out.

My name is Jazz Adam, and I'm calling from Los Angeles. Radiolab is supported in part by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, enhancing public understanding of science and technology in the modern world. More information about Sloan at www.sloan.org. Science Reporting on Radiolab is supported in part by Science Sandbox, a Simons Foundation initiative dedicated to engaging everyone with the process of science.

WNYC Studios is supported by Zuckerman Spader. Through nearly five decades of taking on high-stakes legal matters, Zuckerman Spader is recognized nationally as a premier litigation and investigations firm. Their lawyers routinely represent individuals, organizations, and law firms in business disputes, government, and internal investigations and at trial. When the lawyer you choose matters most.

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Empathy is our best policy. With your Amex card, entertainment benefits like special ticket access and pre-sales to select can't miss events while supplies last. Make every tap music to your ears. Molly. Yes, Lulu. Hi. Hi, this is Radiolab. We are back from a quick break. Today we are talking about, what are we talking about Webster? We are talking about why it is beautiful and terrible to be...

a person with two or more X chromosomes. Because on one hand, like maybe you're a little bit better at fighting off viruses, but that same immune system can also turn on you. So I do think sometimes this just happens. There's accidents, there's imperfect innovations in evolution, but is there any sense of like why this might be advantageous? Why would this might be

be the case that we are the unfortunately or fortunately chosen ones? Yeah, there's probably a few different ways into why.

But I talked to one scientist who gave a really, I don't know, almost like haunting, beautiful lie. Haunting and beautiful. All right. Let's just circle all the way back. And that's our second scientist. Melissa Wilson. She's a geneticist and... Professor at Arizona State University. And Melissa is taking us all the way back to about 100 million years ago to when the placenta evolved. Mm-hmm.

And so as you'll remember from our last episode. Recently met and got to know intimately. We did. So I won't go deep into it here. Y'all should go listen. It's called Everybody's Got One. But what you need to know here. The placenta is not the DNA of the pregnant individual. It's like a foreign object. And so your body naturally wants to find.

fight off something that's not part of it. But the placenta was pretty wily and it started doing things to essentially get the mother's body to let it stay and to not attack it. Right. And so one of the things the placenta does is it quiets the mom's immune system. The placenta itself

is blubbing off signals to downregulate the pregnant person's immune system. And it's like just shushed. So the pregnant person's immune system has to say, okay, sure. You know what? We're going to downregulate components of that. That's fine. But you know what? If I downregulate everything, I don't have sanitation. I don't have antibiotics. This is over most of evolutionary history. If I downregulate everything, I will die, right? And so the pregnant person's body has to do this kind of tightrope walk. It has to

take those signals from the placenta to downregulate components of it. But it also needs to say, you know what? No, I can't downregulate everything. I have to upregulate some things to be able to not die of parasites and pathogens. So Melissa's hypothesis is like, while we were all co-evolving, right? Like the human...

the human mammal and our ancestors were starting to get a placenta and the placenta and the fetus and the human ancestor mammals were all trying to figure out how to live with each other. In this big dance, one of the things that happened was if the placenta is going to drag down the immune system to shush it,

then the mom is going to start evolving an immune system that's actually stronger. Yes, yes. So that when it's dragged down, it's not dragged down to like a death level. It's just dragged down to like a moderate level. Right, yay! Wow. Wow. Okay. So essentially, it's all the placenta's fault. Like we double Xs have to walk around with these

amped up immune systems to just survive its presence? Theoretically, yes. And you actually might be able to see this play out really today because in some women who have autoimmune disorders, their symptoms will go away during pregnancy. They have symptoms and then it just goes away? People with rheumatoid arthritis who become pregnant, it's as if their autoimmune disease is gone.

This also happens with MS, multiple sclerosis. What does go away mean? Like if we could talk specifically about MS or rheumatoid arthritis or both. The inflammation that people have in rheumatoid arthritis around their joints, around their spine, it literally disappears. For a subset of people, for a large subset of people, it's as if it is the best possible treatment.

In rheumatoid arthritis, you know, for 75% of people, symptoms will go away. And in multiple sclerosis, it's like an 80% reduction in flare-ups. I mean... And not even just a reduction in the symptoms, but in some cases, you actually get cognitive ability back.

No, no way. It's huge. And so I had just, you know, these experts all telling me that like they have these anecdotal stories of women who just want to be pregnant all the time because they get such relief in their symptoms or such a slowing of disease progression. Yeah.

I mean, obviously, it is not a slam dunk for every individual or even every autoimmune disorder. Some of them actually get worse when you're pregnant. Some stay the same. Some we just have no data on and we don't know. But it does make you wonder. The first...

OBGYN that I met with. You'll remember Melissa at the top of the episode told us that she's pregnant and that she recently developed Hashimoto's. He said, oh, my colleague was just telling me about this paper they read about pregnancy and how it shaped the immune function. I was like, that's...

And now that she's sort of like stepped into her own research in this pretty novel way, she's actually quite curious to see if pregnancy alleviates her own autoimmune symptoms. And so I'm actually going to be going hopefully to get testing in the next few months to see if the antibodies that my body is making to my thyroid have actually changed during the pregnancy.

Okay, so there is one more part to her hypothesis, and it could offer an explanation for not only why females get autoimmune disorders more than males, but why the incidence might be going up. So for nearly all of human history, we didn't have contraception and contraception.

You could be pregnant for your entire reproductive career. We now live in a world where at least in Western or industrialized nations, people are getting pregnant way less. So we're not going through the cycle of having our immune system dragged down. So if it's on high all the time...

Maybe that in and of itself, the less pregnancies is actually contributing to why women today are getting autoimmune disorders more than in the past. It's like there's just more time that you're spent turbocharged. There's more time spent at 10. And then your body is just like, I'm constantly at a 10. Yeah. Yeah.

Maybe I should go do something. And so we think it's like, if I've got nothing to do, let me just start eating this body. Wreaking havoc. There's this weird thing where I'm like, oh, crap, I should get pregnant. Like, it's like, and it's funny because one of my colleagues was like, you know, there's already so much societal pressure on women to, you know, follow, to conform. And now, like, really? Biology is telling us that because we're not getting pregnant, you know, we're f***ed.

ourselves essentially no no no yeah no keep keep going though no but then the funny thing is is then i think like the reverse of that is like you know how many kids would be enough kids yes we don't know right we don't know yet we don't know if it we don't know if it's more important that you start reproduction as soon as you're reproductively active or whether you maintain it over the whole course or is two enough if you have one 10 years apart or we have zero idea

So Melissa was basically like, okay, slow your roll. First off, there are so many things that can contribute to an autoimmune disorder. I don't think this is going to be your solution. Also, like, do you have one? Do you know you're going to get one? Like, we don't know anything about them, really. Right.

Science is not saying go get pregnant. It's not. A hundred percent not. What it's saying is that pregnancy may have shaped our immune systems. So let's figure out what components of our immune systems respond to the placenta, what components of our immune systems act independently of that, and then we can narrow in on the treatments. Is anyone trying to study it?

Absolutely. Yes. Okay. What is the factor? Which brings us to... Hi, my name is Dr. Rhonda Voskal. Our final scientist. I'm a professor of neurology at UCLA. So Rhonda's out there in California working to understand what specifically, precisely is happening during pregnancy. And she's narrowing in on something that's being produced by the placenta at levels the body just hasn't seen before. Right.

Something happens during pregnancy whereby the fetal placental unit makes a kind of a novel estrogen. And this estrogen is called estriol. And that is an estrogen called estriol. Now, all of a sudden, you have...

This burst of a new estrogen, a different estrogen, and it's at a very high level. And at the end of pregnancy, your body is flooded in estriol. And the baby's body is flooded in estriol. It's like a primary hormone that just skyrockets during the third trimester. Wow. And then after delivery, it drops abruptly. Well, of course, it's made by the fetal placental unit.

AKA the placenta who has been manning the estriol dials has left the building. And I could probably tell you some boring things that wouldn't actually help you understand estriol more. It's just like a different shaped molecule than other estrogens. It has particular functions for the fetus. It could be used in neural development. It's also used by the placenta to turn down the mom's immune system. Mm-hmm.

And so she starts clinical trials, and she's been doing them since like 2007 and 2011. She takes non-pregnant women who have MS, and she gives them estriol. And we showed that it reduced these enhancing lesions by over 70%. Symptoms go away. They see disease progression slow. Whoa. The other thing that's pretty cool is...

As we were doing these trials in humans, there was an improvement in cognition. It is neuroprotective. I basically was like, can I get some Estriol? Well, I was Googling, as you've been talking, I was like, are there Estriol pills? So it would be a pill, except it's not approved anywhere yet for MS. In Europe, I think some people might give it off-label because it's been approved for menopause.

Just for XX individuals or X plus individuals. And would this work? Could Estrell work on a guy or an XY person?

Um, that's an interesting question. I mean, theoretically, yes, because it's a natural hormone. Rhonda says like you'd have to keep an eye out for different feminization things like would it act on their breasts in a certain way? It works in XY mice. Really? Oh, so meaning like the XY mice given some estriol and they... Yeah, they saw a reduction in inflammation. Oh.

Yeah, yeah, yeah. But they've not done any clinical trials on XY humans. Okay. There is a strong case to be made for esteril in MS women and probably rheumatoid arthritis. I think there's a case to be made in psoriasis. There's clearly a role for a pregnancy level of estrogen as a treatment for these autoimmune diseases in women who've already got the disease. I think there's clearly a role for further investigation into that.

And also really quick, you said at the very beginning that like this is the work of provocative women. Why did you use the word provocative?

Because they're looking into stuff. Like, when I talked to Montserrat, she said that at the time, she was the only scientist in the world looking at X inactivation and autoimmune disorder. And do it. That's stupid. That's like, that's insane to me. And Ronda Voxel, like,

She is the studies that she's doing like nobody else was doing. And Melissa's pregnancy compensation hypothesis just came out two years ago. So I use the word provocative because they're asking questions and doing work that like nobody else is doing. And they're actually like upending science, like like Montserrat's paper that showed that X inactivation is not constant.

from time of embryo onwards is like upending. Like 17 textbooks had to be like, oh, we're going to scratch out this dogma of how it works. It's like the earth is cracking and they're the ones that caused the quake. Does that make sense? I don't know. I have no idea where this ends. But this, it sounds like what you found is like this very substantial start. That's the thing. That's...

You know, Rhonda's getting paper after paper after paper that says we're seeing Estriol make a difference. And then we've got this X inactivation stuff. Then we've got this pregnancy hypothesis. And it's like, it feels like we're at the, whether we like it or not, the very beginning of a story. So there really is no ending yet.

Hey, whatever happened to Melissa? Oh, yeah. Okay. So you know how she asked when the story was going to air? That was two years ago. Oh, hi, Melissa.

And when I jumped on the phone with her recently... That's the 15-month-old and the three-month-old is sleeping. I found out it has been quite the two years. I have two pandemic babies and one of them has gotten to be home with me 24-7 for his entire life. Well, then I'll just say, okay, so maybe you can just tell me then...

About the pregnancy and what did end up happening. Because I feel like that was like a cliffhanger in the interview where for months I was like, I wonder, I don't know what her symptoms are. And if she was having symptoms, like, I wonder if they went away. So any symptoms that I would have acknowledged would have been tiredness, some hair loss and

and getting cold. But then when you're pregnant, your hair does wonky things. So her hair did get better when she was pregnant. Great. And she did feel less tired. But one thing did jump out at her. Before she was pregnant, as part of her disease, her thyroid was acting really wonky. Occasionally my

Thyroid antibodies, which is part of the way they diagnose it, they just spike up to like thousands of times larger than they should be. It's just like they give you the test and they say like, oh, the range should be, you know, single digit to double digit. And when yours is in the thousands, you're like, oh. Wow, that's what it was actually in the thousands. Oh, yeah. And then while she was pregnant. My thyroid and my thyroid antibodies and everything was just normal. Her numbers stopped spiking. Oh.

Yeah. Yeah. Did you, I remember, I remember you said to me, there are, I've talked to women who have been like, I just wish I could stay pregnant because I feel so much better. That's not the reason for your back-to-back pregnancies. It wasn't like, I feel so much better. I'm going to stay pregnant. No, no. It was, it was that we wanted a second baby and we're,

And the universe saw fit that they should be so close together. Molly Webster. This episode was produced by Sindhu Jnanasambandam and Molly Webster. And the Gonads theme song that you heard at the top of this episode was written, performed, and produced by Majel Connery and Alex Overington. Thanks for listening.

Radio Lab was created by Jad Abumrad and is edited by Soren Wheeler. Lulu Miller and Latif Nasser are our co-hosts. Suzy Lechtenberg is our executive producer. Dylan Keefe is our director of sound design. Our staff includes Simon Adler, Jeremy Bloom, Becca Bressler, Rachel Cusick, W. Harry Fortuna, David Gable, Maria Paz Gutierrez, Sindhu Nanasambandam,

Matt Kielty, Annie McEwen, Alex Neeson, Zahra Khari, Ariane Wack, Pat Walters, and Molly Webster. With help from Shima Oliai, Sarah Sandbach, and Candice Wong. Our Fact Checkers are Diane Kelly and Emily Krieger.