Kuzawa Christopher W, Adair Linda, Bechayda Sonny A, Borja Judith Rafaelita B, Carba Delia B, Duazo Paulita L, Eisenberg Dan T A, Georgiev Alexander V, Gettler Lee T, Lee Nanette R, Quinn Elizabeth A, Rosenbaum Stacy, Rutherford Julienne N, Ryan Calen P, McDade Thomas W
Department of Anthropology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA.
Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA.
Ann Hum Biol. 2020 Mar;47(2):94-105. doi: 10.1080/03014460.2020.1742787.
By tracking a group of individuals through time, cohort studies provide fundamental insights into the developmental time course and causes of health and disease. Evolutionary life history theory seeks to explain patterns of growth, development, reproduction and senescence, and inspires a range of hypotheses that are testable using the longitudinal data from cohort studies. Here we review two decades of life history theory-motivated work conducted in collaboration with the Cebu Longitudinal Health and Nutrition Survey (CLHNS), a birth cohort study that enrolled more than 3000 pregnant women in the Philippines in 1983 and has since followed these women, their offspring and grandoffspring. This work has provided evidence that reproduction carries "costs" to cellular maintenance functions, potentially speeding senescence, and revealed an unusual form of genetic plasticity in which the length of telomeres inherited across generations is influenced by reproductive timing in paternal ancestors. Men in Cebu experience hormonal and behavioural changes in conjunction with changes in relationship and fatherhood status that are consistent with predictions based upon other species that practice bi-parental care. The theoretical expectation that early life cues of mortality or environmental unpredictability will motivate a "fast" life history strategy are confirmed for behavioural components of reproductive decision making, but not for maturational tempo, while our work points to a broader capacity for early life developmental calibration of systems like immunity, reproductive biology and metabolism. Our CLHNS findings illustrate the power of life history theory as an integrative, lifecourse framework to guide longitudinal studies of human populations.
通过对一组个体进行长期跟踪,队列研究为健康与疾病的发展历程及成因提供了重要见解。进化生命史理论旨在解释生长、发育、繁殖和衰老的模式,并催生了一系列可用队列研究的纵向数据进行检验的假设。在此,我们回顾了与宿务纵向健康与营养调查(CLHNS)合作开展的、受生命史理论驱动的二十年研究工作。CLHNS是一项出生队列研究,1983年在菲律宾招募了3000多名孕妇,此后一直跟踪这些女性及其后代和孙辈。这项工作提供了证据,表明生殖对细胞维持功能产生“成本”,可能加速衰老,并揭示了一种不寻常的遗传可塑性形式,即跨代遗传的端粒长度受父系祖先生殖时间的影响。宿务的男性在人际关系和父亲身份状态发生变化时,会经历激素和行为上的变化,这与基于其他实行双亲照料的物种的预测一致。早期生活中的死亡线索或环境不可预测性会促使采取“快速”生命史策略这一理论预期,在生殖决策的行为成分方面得到了证实,但在成熟节奏方面未得到证实,而我们的研究表明,免疫系统、生殖生物学和新陈代谢等系统在生命早期具有更广泛的发育校准能力。我们在CLHNS中的发现说明了生命史理论作为一个综合的生命历程框架,在指导人类群体纵向研究方面的强大作用。