Department of Anthropology, University of Durham, Durham, UK.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, USA.
Nat Ecol Evol. 2018 Jul;2(7):1146-1154. doi: 10.1038/s41559-018-0567-6. Epub 2018 Jun 25.
Male reproductive investment is energetically costly, and measures of human reproductive steroid hormones (testosterone), developmental tempo (pubertal timing) and growth (stature) correlate with local ecologies at the population level. It is unclear whether male reproductive investment in later life is 'set' during childhood development, mediated through adulthood, or varies by ethnicity. Applying a life-course model to Bangladeshi migrants to the United Kingdom, here we investigate plasticity in human male reproductive function resulting from childhood developmental conditions. We hypothesized that childhood ecology shapes adult trade-offs between reproductive investment and/or other fitness-related traits. We predicted correspondence between these traits and developmental timing of exposure to ecological constraints (Bangladesh) or conditions of surplus (United Kingdom). We compared: Bangladesh sedentees (n = 107); Bangladeshi men who migrated in childhood to the United Kingdom (n = 59); migrants who arrived in adulthood (n = 75); second-generation UK-born and raised children of Bangladeshi migrants (n = 56); and UK-born ethnic Europeans (n = 62). Migration before puberty predicted higher testosterone and an earlier recalled pubertal age compared with Bangladeshi sedentees or adult migrants, with more pronounced differences in men who arrived before the age of eight. Second-generation Bangladeshis were taller, with higher testosterone than sedentees and adult migrants, and higher waking testosterone than Europeans. Age-related testosterone profiles varied by group, declining in UK migrants, increasing in sedentees, and having no significant relationship within UK-born groups. We conclude that male reproductive function apparently remains plastic late into childhood, is independent of Bengali or European ethnicity, and shapes physiological trade-offs later in life.
男性生殖投资在能量上是昂贵的,人类生殖类固醇激素(睾酮)、发育速度(青春期时间)和生长(身高)的测量值与人群水平的局部生态相关。目前尚不清楚男性在晚年的生殖投资是在儿童发育期间“确定”的,还是通过成年期来调节的,或者是否因种族而异。通过应用生命周期模型对移民到英国的孟加拉人进行研究,我们在这里调查了由于儿童发育条件而导致的人类男性生殖功能的可塑性。我们假设儿童期生态塑造了成年期生殖投资和/或其他与健康相关特征之间的权衡。我们预测这些特征与暴露于生态限制(孟加拉国)或过剩条件(英国)的发育时间之间存在一致性。我们比较了:定居孟加拉国的人(n=107);在儿童时期移民到英国的孟加拉人(n=59);成年后到达的移民(n=75);第二代在英国出生和长大的孟加拉移民子女(n=56);和在英国出生的欧洲人(n=62)。青春期前的移民预测睾酮水平更高,青春期年龄更早,与定居孟加拉国的人或成年移民相比,差异更为明显,尤其是那些在 8 岁之前到达的男性。第二代孟加拉人更高,睾酮水平高于定居者和成年移民,醒来时的睾酮水平高于欧洲人。与年龄相关的睾酮水平因群体而异,英国移民的睾酮水平下降,定居者的睾酮水平上升,而在英国出生的群体中则没有显著的相关性。我们得出结论,男性生殖功能显然在儿童后期仍然具有可塑性,不受孟加拉或欧洲种族的影响,并在以后的生活中塑造生理权衡。