The dawn of Darwinian medicine
by
Williams GC, Nesse RM
Department of Ecology & Evolution,
State University of Stony Brook,
New
York 11794-5245.
Q Rev Biol 1991 Mar; 66(1):1-22
ABSTRACT
While evolution by natural selection has long been a foundation for
biomedical science, it has recently gained new power to explain many aspects of
disease. This progress results largely from the disciplined application of what
has been called the adaptations program. We show that this increasingly
significant research paradigm can predict otherwise unsuspected facets of human
biology, and that it provides new insights into the causes of medical disorders,
such as those discussed below: 1. Infection. Signs and symptoms of the
host-parasite contest can be categorized according to whether they represent
adaptations or costs for host or parasite. Some host adaptations may have
contributed to fitness in the Stone Age but are obsolete today. Others, such as
fever and iron sequestration, have been incorrectly considered harmful.
Pathogens, with their large populations and many generations in a single host,
can evolve very rapidly. Acquisition of resistance to antibiotics is one
example. Another is the recently demonstrated tendency to change virulence
levels in predictable ways in response to changed conditions imposed
incidentally by human activities. 2. Injuries and toxins. Mechanical injuries or
stressful wear and tear are conceptually simpler than infectious diseases
because they are not contests between conflicting interests. Plant-herbivore
contests may often underlie chemical injury from the defensive secondary
compounds of plant tissues. Nausea in pregnancy, and allergy, may be adaptations
against such toxins. 3. Genetic factors. Common genetic diseases often result
from genes maintained by other beneficial effects in historically normal
environments. The diseases of aging are especially likely to be associated with
early benefits. 4. Abnormal environments. Human biology is designed for Stone
Age conditions. Modern environments may cause many diseases-for example,
deficiency syndromes such as scurvy and rickets, the effects of excess
consumption of normally scarce nutrients such as fat and salt, developmental
diseases such as myopia, and psychological reactions to novel environments. The
substantial benefits of evolutionary studies of disease will be realized only if
they become central to medical curricula, an advance that may at first require
the establishment of one or more research centers dedicated to the further
development of Darwinian medicine.
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