Department of Mathematics, Western University, London, ON, N6A 5B7, Canada.
Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, 08544, USA.
Nat Commun. 2022 Aug 18;13(1):4858. doi: 10.1038/s41467-022-32569-6.
Medical research reports that women often exhibit stronger immune responses than men, while pathogens tend to be more virulent in men. Current explanations cannot account for this pattern, creating an obstacle for our understanding of infectious-disease outcomes and the incidence of autoimmune diseases. We offer an alternative explanation that relies on a fundamental difference between the sexes: maternity and the opportunities it creates for transmission of pathogens from mother to child (vertical transmission). Our explanation relies on a mathematical model of the co-evolution of host immunocompetence and pathogen virulence. Here, we show that when there is sufficient vertical transmission co-evolution leads women to defend strongly against temperate pathogens and men to defend weakly against aggressive pathogens, in keeping with medical observations. From a more applied perspective, we argue that limiting vertical transmission of infections would alleviate the disproportionate incidence of autoimmune diseases in women over evolutionary time.
医学研究报告表明,女性的免疫反应通常比男性更强,而病原体在男性中往往更具毒性。目前的解释无法说明这种模式,这给我们理解传染病的结果和自身免疫性疾病的发病率造成了障碍。我们提供了一种替代解释,该解释依赖于性别之间的一个基本差异:生育和它为病原体从母亲到孩子的传播(垂直传播)创造的机会。我们的解释依赖于宿主免疫能力和病原体毒性的共同进化的数学模型。在这里,我们表明,当存在足够的垂直传播共同进化时,女性会强烈抵御温和的病原体,而男性则会弱抵御侵袭性的病原体,这与医学观察结果一致。从更实际的角度来看,我们认为限制感染的垂直传播将减轻女性在进化过程中自身免疫性疾病发病率不成比例的问题。