Speakman John R
Aberdeen Centre for Energy Regulation and Obesity, School of Biological Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Scotland AB24 2TZ, UK.
Cell Metab. 2007 Jul;6(1):5-12. doi: 10.1016/j.cmet.2007.06.004.
The "thrifty gene hypothesis" suggests we evolved genes for efficient food collection and fat deposition to survive periods of famine and that now that food is continuously available, these genes are disadvantageous because they make us obese in preparation for a famine that never comes. However, famines are relatively infrequent modern phenomena that involve insufficient mortality for thrifty genes to propagate. I suggest here that early hominids would have been subjected to stabilizing selection for body fatness, with obesity selected against by the risk of predation. Around two million years ago predation was removed as a significant factor by the development of social behavior, weapons, and fire. The absence of predation led to a change in the population distribution of body fatness due to random mutations and drift. Because this novel hypothesis involves random drift, rather than directed selection, it explains why, even in Western society, most people are not obese.
“节俭基因假说”认为,我们进化出了高效收集食物和储存脂肪的基因,以便在饥荒时期生存下来。而现在食物持续可得,这些基因却变得不利,因为它们让我们在并无饥荒时变得肥胖。然而,饥荒是相对罕见的现代现象,涉及的死亡率不足以让节俭基因得以传播。我在此提出,早期人类本会受到身体脂肪量的稳定选择,肥胖因被捕食的风险而被淘汰。大约两百万年前,由于社会行为、武器和火的发展,捕食不再是一个重要因素。捕食的消失因随机突变和基因漂变导致了身体脂肪量的种群分布发生变化。由于这个新假说涉及随机漂变,而非定向选择,所以它解释了为什么即使在西方社会,大多数人也并不肥胖。