Although growing evidence points to a pivotal role of perturbed metal homeostasis
in childhood obesity, sexual dimorphisms in this association have rarely
been investigated. In this study, we applied multi-elemental analysis to plasma
and erythrocyte samples from an observational cohort comprising children
with obesity, with and without insulin resistance, and healthy control children.
Furthermore, a wide number of variables related to carbohydrate and lipid
metabolism, inflammation, and sex hormones were also determined. Children
with obesity, regardless of sex and insulin resistance status, showed increased
plasma copper-to-zinc ratios. More interestingly, obesity-related erythroid
alterations were found to be sex-dependent, with increased contents of iron,
zinc, and copper being exclusively detected among female subjects. Our findings
suggest that a sexually dimorphic hormonal dysregulation in response to
a pathological cascade involving inflammatory processes and hyperinsulinemia
could be the main trigger of this female-specific intracellular sequestration of
trace elements. Therefore, the present study highlights the relevance of genotypic
sex as a susceptibility factor influencing the pathogenic events behind
childhood obesity, thereby opening the door to develop sex-personalized
approaches in the context of precision medicine.