Koopman Jacob J E, Pijpe Jeroen, Böhringer Stefan, van Bodegom David, Eriksson Ulrika K, Sanchez-Faddeev Hernando, Ziem Juventus B, Zwaan Bas, Slagboom P Eline, de Knijff Peter, Westendorp Rudi G J
Section of Gerontology and Geriatrics, Department of Internal Medicine, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, the Netherlands.
Department of Human Genetics, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, the Netherlands.
Aging (Albany NY). 2016 Jul;8(7):1364-83. doi: 10.18632/aging.100986.
Human survival probability and fertility decline strongly with age. These life history traits have been shaped by evolution. However, research has failed to uncover a consistent genetic determination of variation in survival and fertility. As an explanation, such genetic determinants have been selected in adverse environments, in which humans have lived during most of their history, but are almost exclusively studied in populations in modern affluent environments. Here, we present a large-scale candidate gene association study in a rural African population living in an adverse environment. In 4387 individuals, we studied 4052 SNPs in 148 genes that have previously been identified as possible determinants of survival or fertility in animals or humans. We studied their associations with survival comparing newborns, middle-age adults, and old individuals. In women, we assessed their associations with reported and observed numbers of children. We found no statistically significant associations of these SNPs with survival between the three age groups nor with women's reported and observed fertility. Population stratification was unlikely to explain these results. Apart from a lack of power, we hypothesise that genetic heterogeneity of complex phenotypes and gene-environment interactions prevent the identification of genetic variants explaining variation in survival and fertility in humans.
人类的生存概率和生育能力会随着年龄的增长而大幅下降。这些生活史特征是由进化塑造的。然而,研究未能发现生存和生育能力变异的一致遗传决定因素。一种解释是,这种遗传决定因素是在不利环境中被选择的,在人类历史的大部分时间里,人类都生活在这样的环境中,但几乎完全是在现代富裕环境中的人群中进行研究。在这里,我们对生活在不利环境中的非洲农村人口进行了一项大规模候选基因关联研究。在4387名个体中,我们研究了148个基因中的4052个单核苷酸多态性(SNP),这些基因先前已被确定为动物或人类生存或生育能力的可能决定因素。我们比较了新生儿、中年成年人和老年人,研究了这些SNP与生存的关联。在女性中,我们评估了它们与报告的和观察到的子女数量的关联。我们发现,这些SNP与三个年龄组之间的生存以及与女性报告的和观察到的生育能力均无统计学上的显著关联。群体分层不太可能解释这些结果。除了缺乏检验效能外,我们推测复杂表型的遗传异质性和基因-环境相互作用阻碍了对解释人类生存和生育能力变异的遗传变异的识别。