维纳斯雕像的逆向工程:旧石器时代肥胖病因学的生态生命过程假说。

IF 3.3 3区 医学 Q2 EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health Pub Date : 2024-11-28 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1093/emph/eoae031
Jonathan C K Wells, Frank L'Engle Williams, Gernot Desoye
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引用次数: 0

摘要

关于肥胖的进化观点一直由遗传框架主导,但塑性反应也是其病因学的核心。虽然肥胖通常被认为是一种相对现代的现象,但在旧石器时代,通过女性小雕像(维纳斯雕像)就有了肥胖的记录。即使这种表型很罕见,但这些雕像表明,一些女性在最后一个冰川高峰时期(营养压力时期)达到了巨大的体型。为了探索这一悖论,我们开发了一个生态生命过程概念框架,将饮食转变的影响与代际生物学机制相结合。我们假设旧石器时代的人群暴露于冰期,他们有很高的瘦肉质量和很高的饮食蛋白质需求。我们借鉴了蛋白质杠杆假说,该假说认为低蛋白质饮食会导致能量过度消耗以满足蛋白质需求。我们回顾了植物性食物对饮食的贡献增加的证据,因为最后一次冰川极大期发生,假设饮食中蛋白质含量降低。我们考虑的生理机制,通过母亲超重影响肥胖易感性的后代在怀孕期间。综合这些证据,我们认为最后一个冰期最大限度地降低了饮食中的蛋白质含量,并推动了蛋白质的杠杆作用,增加了体重,这一过程在几代人之间放大。通过这些机制与环境变化的相互作用,肥胖可能在易感基因型的女性中发展,反映了线性生长与肥胖之间更广泛的权衡以及体重人群分布的变化。我们的方法可能会刺激生物考古学家和古人类学家更详细地研究古肥胖,并利用人类生物学的原理来解释证据。
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Reverse-engineering the Venus figurines: An eco-life-course hypothesis for the aetiology of obesity in the Palaeolithic.

Evolutionary perspectives on obesity have been dominated by genetic frameworks, but plastic responses are also central to its aetiology. While often considered a relatively modern phenomenon, obesity was recorded during the Palaeolithic through small statuettes of the female form (Venus figurines). Even if the phenotype was rare, these statuettes indicate that some women achieved large body sizes during the last glacial maximum, a period of nutritional stress. To explore this paradox, we develop an eco-life-course conceptual framework that integrates the effects of dietary transitions with intergenerational biological mechanisms. We assume that Palaeolithic populations exposed to glaciations had high lean mass and high dietary protein requirements. We draw on the protein leverage hypothesis, which posits that low-protein diets drive overconsumption of energy to satisfy protein needs. We review evidence for an increasing contribution of plant foods to diets as the last glacial maximum occurred, assumed to reduce dietary protein content. We consider physiological mechanisms through which maternal overweight impacts the obesity susceptibility of the offspring during pregnancy. Integrating this evidence, we suggest that the last glacial maximum decreased dietary protein content and drove protein leverage, increasing body weight in a process that amplified across generations. Through the interaction of these mechanisms with environmental change, obesity could have developed among women with susceptible genotypes, reflecting broader trade-offs between linear growth and adiposity and shifts in the population distribution of weight. Our approach may stimulate bioarchaeologists and paleoanthropologists to examine paleo-obesity in greater detail and to draw upon the tenets of human biology to interpret evidence.

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来源期刊
Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health
Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health Environmental Science-Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
2.70%
发文量
37
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: About the Journal Founded by Stephen Stearns in 2013, Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health is an open access journal that publishes original, rigorous applications of evolutionary science to issues in medicine and public health. It aims to connect evolutionary biology with the health sciences to produce insights that may reduce suffering and save lives. Because evolutionary biology is a basic science that reaches across many disciplines, this journal is open to contributions on a broad range of topics.
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