Bonilla Carolina, Ness Andrew R, Wills Andrew K, Lawlor Debbie A, Lewis Sarah J, Davey Smith George
School of Social and Community Medicine, University of Bristol, Oakfield House, Oakfield Grove, Bristol BS8 2BN, UK.
BMC Public Health. 2014 Jun 12;14:597. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-14-597.
It has been hypothesised that light skin pigmentation has arisen to ensure adequate levels of vitamin D as human populations moved out of Africa and into higher latitudes. Vitamin D, which is primarily obtained through exposure to sunlight (specifically ultraviolet radiation B (UVR-B)), has been inversely associated with several complex diseases. Greater sun exposure, on the other hand, is a well-known cause of skin cancer. The potential of UVR to be beneficial for some health outcomes but detrimental for others has prompted a public health debate on how to balance the positive and negative consequences of sun exposure. In this study we aimed to determine the validity of the evolutionary hypothesis linking lighter skin with higher vitamin D concentrations in a European population. Additionally, we aimed to examine the influence of pigmentation on personal behaviour towards sunlight exposure and the effects of this behaviour on vitamin D.
We combined genetic variants strongly associated with skin colour, tanning or freckling to create genetic scores for each of these phenotypes. We examined the association of the scores with pigmentary traits, sun exposure and serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) levels among children of the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC, N = 661 to 5649).
We found that fairer-skinned children, i.e. those with higher pigmentation score values, had higher levels of 25(OH)D (0.6 nmol/l; 95% CI 0.2, 1.0; per unit increase in skin colour score; N = 5649). These children also used more protection against the damaging effects of UVR.
In this population taking protective measures against sunburn and skin cancer does not seem to remove the positive effect that having a less pigmented skin has on vitamin D production. Our findings require further replication as skin pigmentation showed only a small effect on circulating 25(OH)D.
有假说认为,随着人类群体迁出非洲并进入高纬度地区,浅肤色的出现是为了确保足够水平的维生素D。维生素D主要通过阳光照射(特别是紫外线B(UVR - B))获得,它与几种复杂疾病呈负相关。另一方面,更多的阳光照射是皮肤癌的一个众所周知的病因。UVR对某些健康结果有益但对其他结果有害的可能性引发了一场关于如何平衡阳光照射的正负后果的公共卫生辩论。在本研究中,我们旨在确定将浅肤色与欧洲人群中较高维生素D浓度联系起来的进化假说的有效性。此外,我们旨在研究色素沉着对个人阳光照射行为的影响以及这种行为对维生素D的影响。
我们将与肤色、晒黑或雀斑强烈相关的基因变异组合起来,为这些表型中的每一个创建基因评分。我们在埃文父母与儿童纵向研究(ALSPAC,N = 661至5649)的儿童中,研究了这些评分与色素沉着特征、阳光照射和血清25 - 羟基维生素D(25(OH)D)水平之间的关联。
我们发现皮肤较白的儿童,即那些色素沉着评分值较高的儿童,其25(OH)D水平较高(每单位肤色评分增加,25(OH)D水平升高0.6 nmol/l;95% CI 0.2,1.0;N = 5649)。这些儿童也更多地采取防护措施以抵御UVR的有害影响。
在这个群体中,采取预防晒伤和皮肤癌的保护措施似乎并未消除肤色较浅对维生素D生成的积极影响。由于皮肤色素沉着对循环中的25(OH)D仅显示出较小的影响,我们的研究结果需要进一步验证。