Evolutionary Immunology and Genomics Laboratory, Department of Anthropology, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois, USA.
Carl R Woese Institute for Genomic Biology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois, USA.
Evol Anthropol. 2021 Mar;30(2):141-157. doi: 10.1002/evan.21887. Epub 2021 Mar 10.
Among mammals, humans are exquisitely sensitive to lipopolysaccharide (LPS), an environmentally pervasive bacterial cell membrane component. Very small doses of LPS trigger powerful immune responses in humans and can even initiate symptoms of sepsis. Close evolutionary relatives such as African and Asian monkeys require doses that are an order of magnitude higher to do the same. Why humans have evolved such an energetically expensive antimicrobial strategy is a question that biological anthropologists are positioned to help address. Here we compare LPS sensitivity in primate/mammalian models and propose that human high sensitivity to LPS is adaptive, linked to multiple immune tactics against pathogens, and part of multi-faceted anti-microbial strategy that strongly overlaps with that of other mammals. We support a notion that LPS sensitivity in humans has been driven by microorganisms that constitutively live on us, and has been informed by human behavioral changes over our species' evolution (e.g., meat eating, agricultural practices, and smoking).
在哺乳动物中,人类对脂多糖(LPS)非常敏感,LPS 是一种普遍存在于环境中的细菌细胞膜成分。非常小剂量的 LPS 就能在人体内引发强烈的免疫反应,甚至可能引发败血症症状。人类的近亲,如非洲和亚洲的猴子,需要高出一个数量级的剂量才能产生同样的效果。为什么人类进化出如此昂贵的能量抗菌策略,这是一个生物人类学家有能力帮助解答的问题。在这里,我们比较了灵长类/哺乳动物模型中的 LPS 敏感性,并提出人类对 LPS 的高度敏感性是适应性的,与针对病原体的多种免疫策略有关,是多方面抗菌策略的一部分,与其他哺乳动物的策略有很强的重叠。我们支持这样一种观点,即人类对 LPS 的敏感性是由在我们身上持续存在的微生物驱动的,并受到人类在物种进化过程中行为变化的影响(例如,吃肉、农业实践和吸烟)。