Obesity in emerging nations: evolutionary origins and the impact of a rapid nutrition transition.

Andrew M Prentice
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引用次数: 21

Abstract

Here we explore whether there is any evidence that the rapid development of the obesity epidemic in emerging nations, and its unusual coexistence with malnutrition, may have evolutionary origins that make such populations especially vulnerable to the obesogenic conditions accompanying the nutrition transition. It is concluded that any selection of so-called 'thrifty genes' is likely to have affected most races due to the frequency and ubiquity of famines and seasonal food shortages in ancient populations. Although it remains a useful stimulus for research, the thrifty gene hypothesis remains a theoretical construct that so far lacks any concrete examples. There is currently little evidence that the ancestral genomes of native Asian or African populations carry particular risk alleles for obesity. Interestingly, however, there is evidence that a variant allele of the FTO gene that favors leanness may be less active in Asians or Africans. There is also some evidence that Caucasians may be less prone to developing type 2 diabetes mellitus than other races suggesting that there has been recent selection of protective alleles. In the near future, recently developed statistical methods for comparing genome-wide data across populations are likely to reveal or refute the presence of any thrifty genes and might indicate mechanisms of vulnerability.

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新兴国家的肥胖:进化起源和快速营养转变的影响。
在这里,我们探讨是否有证据表明,肥胖流行病在新兴国家的迅速发展,以及它与营养不良的不同寻常的共存,可能有进化的起源,使得这些人群特别容易受到伴随营养转变的致肥条件的影响。结论是,任何所谓的“节俭基因”的选择都可能影响到大多数种族,因为古代人口中饥荒的频率和普遍存在以及季节性食物短缺。尽管节俭基因假说仍然是一个有益的研究刺激因素,但它仍然是一个理论结构,迄今为止缺乏任何具体的例子。目前几乎没有证据表明亚洲或非洲土著人口的祖先基因组携带特别的肥胖风险等位基因。然而,有趣的是,有证据表明,FTO基因中一个倾向于苗条的变异等位基因在亚洲人或非洲人身上可能不那么活跃。还有一些证据表明,与其他种族相比,白种人可能更不容易患2型糖尿病,这表明最近有保护性等位基因的选择。在不久的将来,最近开发的用于比较人群全基因组数据的统计方法可能会揭示或反驳任何节俭基因的存在,并可能指出脆弱性的机制。
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