Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Columbia University, New York, NY, 10032.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2013 Dec;152 Suppl 57(Suppl 57):135-52. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.22396.
Though agriculture is often viewed as one of humanity's crowning achievements, skeletal evidence indicates that dependence on domesticated plants and animals was accompanied by an increase in infectious disease. Scientists have proposed that many important infections emerged in the period following the advent of agriculture, as a result of newly dense populations and novel proximity to domestic animals that served as reservoirs for novel pathogens. Here, we review genomic evidence regarding pathogen origins, analyzing these data using the epidemiological transition framework. Genetic information has forced us to reconsider how and when many important pathogens emerged; it appears that a number of infections thought to result from contact with domesticated animals arose much earlier than agriculture was adopted. We also consider the broader effect of agriculture upon the microbiome, exploring potential consequences for human health. We end by discussing the changes in the human microbe-scape we are likely to see in the future.
尽管农业通常被视为人类的一项伟大成就,但骨骼证据表明,对驯化植物和动物的依赖伴随着传染病的增加。科学家们提出,许多重要的传染病是在农业出现后的时期出现的,这是由于人口密度的增加和与作为新型病原体储存库的家养动物的新型接触所致。在这里,我们回顾了有关病原体起源的基因组证据,使用流行病学转型框架分析了这些数据。遗传信息迫使我们重新考虑许多重要病原体是如何以及何时出现的;似乎有一些被认为是由于与驯化动物接触而产生的感染比农业的采用要早得多。我们还考虑了农业对微生物组的更广泛影响,探索了对人类健康的潜在影响。最后,我们讨论了未来人类微生物环境可能发生的变化。