Department of Anthropology, Hunter College, City University of New York, New York, NY 10065.
Department of Human Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2018 Apr 24;115(17):E3914-E3921. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1717522115. Epub 2018 Apr 9.
Immune function is an energetically costly physiological activity that potentially diverts calories away from less immediately essential life tasks. Among developing organisms, the allocation of energy toward immune function may lead to tradeoffs with physical growth, particularly in high-pathogen, low-resource environments. The present study tests this hypothesis across diverse timeframes, branches of immunity, and conditions of energy availability among humans. Using a prospective mixed-longitudinal design, we collected anthropometric and blood immune biomarker data from 261 Amazonian forager-horticulturalist Shuar children (age 4-11 y old). This strategy provided baseline measures of participant stature, s.c. body fat, and humoral and cell-mediated immune activity as well as subsample longitudinal measures of linear growth (1 wk, 3 mo, 20 mo) and acute inflammation. Multilevel analyses demonstrate consistent negative effects of immune function on growth, with children experiencing up to 49% growth reduction during periods of mildly elevated immune activity. The direct energetic nature of these relationships is indicated by () the manifestation of biomarker-specific negative immune effects only when examining growth over timeframes capturing active competition for energetic resources, () the exaggerated impact of particularly costly inflammation on growth, and () the ability of children with greater levels of body fat (i.e., energy reserves) to completely avoid the growth-inhibiting effects of acute inflammation. These findings provide evidence for immunologically and temporally diverse body fat-dependent tradeoffs between immune function and growth during childhood. We discuss the implications of this work for understanding human developmental energetics and the biological mechanisms regulating variation in human ontogeny, life history, and health.
免疫功能是一种耗费能量的生理活动,它可能会将卡路里从不太直接重要的生命任务中转移出来。在发育中的生物体中,将能量分配给免疫功能可能会导致与身体生长的权衡,尤其是在高病原体、低资源的环境中。本研究通过跨不同时间框架、免疫分支和能量供应条件,在人类中检验了这一假设。我们使用前瞻性混合纵向设计,从 261 名亚马逊觅食-园艺沙瓦尔儿童(4-11 岁)中收集了人体测量和血液免疫生物标志物数据。这种策略提供了参与者身高、皮下体脂、体液和细胞介导免疫活动的基线测量,以及线性生长(1 周、3 个月、20 个月)和急性炎症的亚样本纵向测量。多层次分析表明,免疫功能对生长的负面影响是一致的,儿童在轻度免疫活性升高期间的生长减少了高达 49%。这些关系的直接能量性质表明,只有在检查随着时间推移而捕捉到积极竞争能量资源的生长时,生物标志物特异性负免疫效应才会显现出来;特别昂贵的炎症对生长的影响被夸大了;体脂水平较高(即能量储备)的儿童能够完全避免急性炎症对生长的抑制作用。这些发现为儿童期免疫功能和生长之间的免疫和时间上多样化的、依赖体脂的权衡提供了证据。我们讨论了这项工作对理解人类发育能量学以及调节人类个体发生、生活史和健康的生物机制的意义。