Principles of evolutionary medicine

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Hauptverfasser: Gluckman, Peter D. 1949- (VerfasserIn), Beedle, Alan (VerfasserIn), Hanson, Mark A. 1949- (VerfasserIn)
Format: Buch
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: Oxford [u.a.] Oxford Univ. Press 2009
Ausgabe:1. publ.
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adam_text Contents Preface xiii PART 1 FUNDAMENTALS OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY 1 Introduction 3 1.1 What is disease? 4 1.2 What evolution is: fundamental principles 8 1.2.1 Selection 10 1.2.2 Variation and inheritance 10 1.2.3 Development and the life course 11 1.3 Time 13 1.4 Constraints 15 1.5 We are not alone 1 6 1.6 How evolutionary arguments fit alongside other biological perspectives 17 1.7 Evolution and medicine 18 Key points 18 Further reading 18 2 Evolutionary theory 21 2.1 Introduction 21 2.2 What does evolutionary theory explain? 26 2.3 How does evolution work? 29 2.3.1 Variation 30 2.3.7.7 Mutation 31 2.3.1.2 Recombination 31 2.3.7.3 Constraints on variation 32 2.3.2 Selection 34 2.3.2.7 Artificial seleaion 34 2.3.2.2 Natural selection 34 2.3.2.3 Sexual selection 35 vi CONTENTS 2.3.2.4 Levels of selection 36 2.3.2.5 Genes as units of selection 37 23.2.6 Extended phenotype 38 2.3.3 Inheritance 38 2.4 Areas of debate and the limitations of adaptationist argument 41 2.4.1 Does evolution have a direction? 41 2.4.2 Selection is not random 42 2.4.3 Is selection the only mechanism of evolution? 43 2.4.4 Is every feature of an organism an adaptation? 44 2.4.5 How do species evolve? 45 2.4.6 How fast is evolution? 47 2.4.7 How do we explain traits that appear to reduce fitness? 48 2.5 Conclusion 48 Key points 49 Further reading 49 3 The molecular basis of variation and inheritance 51 3.1 Introduction 51 3.2 Molecular basis of human genetic variation 52 3.2.1 What is a gene? 52 3.2.2 Mutation as a cause of sequence variation in the genome 53 3.2.3 SNPs 53 3.2.4 Indels 56 3.2.5 VNTRs 56 3.2.6 Transposable elements 56 3.2.7 Structural polymorphism 57 3.3 How different are any two individual genomes? 57 3.3.1 Recombination as a source of variation 58 3.3.2 Haplotypes and linkage 59 3.4 Factors affecting variation 60 3.4.1 How drift affects diversity 60 3.4.2 Molecular effects of selection 63 3.4.3 Signatures of selection 64 3.5 From genotype to phenotype 64 3.6 Why hasn t selection eliminated monogenie disease from the population? 68 3.7 No single genes for common diseases 70 3.8 Non-genetic inheritance 71 3.9 Conclusion 74 Key points 74 Further reading 75 4 Evolution and development 77 4.1 Introduction 77 4.2 Development: pre-ordained or plastic? 79 CONTENTS vii 4.3 Is development important? 80 4.4 Developmental plasticity 83 4.5 Responses to environmental cues during development 84 4.5.1 Developmental disruption 84 4.5.2 Adaptive responses in development 85 4.5.2.7 Immediately adaptive responses: coping with the consequences 85 4.5.2.2 Predictive adaptive responses 86 4.6 Epigenetic mechanisms 88 4.7 Intergenerational effects 90 4.8 Learning and instinct 92 4.9 Evolution of novelty 92 4.10 Conclusion 94 Key points 96 Further reading 96 5 Evolution of life histories 97 5.1 Introduction 97 5.2 General overview of life history theory 98 5.2.1 Key trade-offs in life histories 98 5.2.7.7 Number versus quality of offspring 100 5.2.7.2 Current versus future reproduction 100 5.2.7.3 Age versus size at maturity 101 5.2.1.4 Fecundity versus lifespan 101 5.2.2 Extrinsic and intrinsic mortality 102 5.2.3 Extrinsic mortality and age at menarche 104 5.2.4 Lifespan and ageing 105 5.2.5 Evolutionary theories of senescence 106 5.3 Body size and shape 108 5.3.1 Allometry 109 5.3.2 Variation in growth and development 109 5.4 Growth in humans 112 5.4.1 Phases of growth 112 5.4.2 Puberty 114 5.5 Evolutionary analysis of the distinct features of human growth 116 5.5.1 The childhood phase 117 5.5.2 Pubertal growth spurt 118 5.5.3 Reproductive decline and the menopause 119 5.6 Conclusion: interpreting the human life history 120 Key points 121 Further reading 121 б Human evolution and the origins of human diversity 123 6.1 Introduction 123 6.2 The hominoid clade 123 viii CONTENTS б.З Hominin evolution 6.3.1 Timeline and species 6.3.2 Bipedalism 6.3.3 Body size 6.3.4 Face, jaw, and dentition 6.3.5 Gastrointestinal tract 6.3.6 The hairless ape 6.3.7 The hominin brain 6.3.8 Tool making 6.3.9 Language 6.3.10 Culture and society 6.3.11 Cultural evolution 6.4 Human adaptation to local selection pressures 6.4.1 Hominin origins and migrations: out of Africa again 6.4.2 Variation caused by migration 6.4.3 Variation caused by change in lifeways 6.5 Are humans still evolving? 6.6 Social implications of human diversity 6.7 Conclusion Key points Further reading 124 124 127 128 128 129 129 129 134 135 137 139 141 141 143 144 144 146 147 147 147 PART 2 UNDERSTANDING HUMAN DISEASE FROM AN EVOLUTIONARY PERSPECTIVE Reproduction 151 7.1 Introduction 7.2 Sexual reproduction 7.3 Why did sex evolve? 7.4 Sex determination 7.5 Reproductive strategies 7.6 Mate choice 7.7 Sexual differences in the human 7.8 Gender differences in morbidity and mortality 7.9 The human reproductive cycle 7.9.1 Puberty 7.9.2 The timing of puberty 7.9.3 Why menstruate? 7.9.4 Pregnancy 7.9.5 The placenta 7.9.6 Maternal-fetal interactions 7.9.7 Regulation of fetal growth 7.9.8 Conflict in development 7.9.9 Lactation and postnatal care 7.9.10 The menopause 151 152 152 155 155 156 160 161 162 162 163 166 166 167 168 170 172 172 173 CONTENTS ix 7.10 Conclusion: reproduction and evolution 175 Key points 176 Further reading 177 8 Nutritional and metabolic adaptation 179 8.1 Introduction 179 8.2 Strategies for energy storage 179 8.3 Human diet: an evolutionary history 182 8.3.1 Pre-agricultural hominins 182 8.3.7.7 Anatomical evidence for diet quality in early humans 183 8.3.1.2 Modern foraging populations: what do they teach us? 184 8.3.2 The Neolithic Revolution 186 8.3.3 The modern nutrition transition 187 8.3.4 Well fed but poorly nourished 188 8.4 How can change in the environment increase disease risk? 192 8.4.1 A thrifty genotype? 192 8.4.7.7 Search for thrifty genes 192 8.4.7.2 Was there feast and famine? 194 8.4.7.3 Has post-agricultural famine selected thrifty genes? 194 8.5 Does evolutionary novelty explain current patterns of metabolic disease and obesity? 197 8.6 A developmental perspective: the missing link? 198 8.6.1 Maladaptive consequences of an adaptive process 201 8.6.2 Developmental plasticity in the setting of evolutionary novelty 203 8.6.3 Other possible developmental pathways 205 8.7 Conclusion 206 Key points 208 Further reading 208 9 Defence 211 9.1 Introduction 211 9.2 Prédation and conspecific violence 211 9.2.1 Stress 212 9.2.2 Developmental changes in stress responses: adaptive prediction 213 9.3 Dealing with infection 216 9.3.1 Commensals 216 9.3.2 Pathogen emergence 217 9.3.3 Virulence 218 9.3.4 Antibiotic resistance 221 9.3.5 Microbiota and the human genome 221 9.3.6 Innate immunity 222 9.3.7 Adaptive immunity 224 χ CONTENTS 9.3.8 Vaccination 226 9.3.9 Dysregulation of the immune system 227 9.3.9.7 Autoimmune disease 227 93.9.2 Developmental regulation of immunity 227 9.3.93 Allergies and chronic inflammatory disorders 227 9.4 Other threats 228 9.5 Injury 229 9.6 Sleep and repair 230 9.7 Conclusion 230 Key points 231 Further reading 231 Stress responses 231 Defence 231 Detoxification 231 10 Social organization and behaviour 233 10.1 Introduction 233 10.2 Biological determinants of culture and behaviour 233 10.3 Evolution of human brain and behaviour 234 10.4 Evolution of social behaviour 236 10.4.1 Altruism 237 10.4.2 Selfishness and selfish genes 239 10.4.3 Emotions: Darwinian algorithms of the mind 242 10.4.4 Love, jealousy, marriage, and inheritance 242 10.4.5 Group behaviour and morality 244 10.4.6 Belief and religion 244 10.4.7 Learning 245 10.5 Evolutionary perspectives on psychology 246 10.6 Evolutionary psychiatry 248 10.6.1 Personality traits and disorders 248 10.6.2 Disorders of mood 249 70.6.2.7 Anxiety 249 70.6.22 Phobias 249 7 0.6.2.3 Depression and bipolar disorder 250 10.6.3 Psychoses 251 10.7 Conclusion 251 Key points 253 Further reading 253 PART 3 AN EVOLUTIONARY FRAMEWORK FOR HEALTH AND DISEASE 11 Evolutionary principles applied to medical practice 257 11.1 Introduction 257 11.2 Fundamental principles of evolutionary medicine 258 CONTENTS xi 11.3 Why has evolution left our bodies vulnerable to disease? 259 11.4 An evolutionary classification of ultimate mechanisms affecting disease risk 260 Π .4.1 Pathway 1 : an evolutionarily mismatched or novel environment 260 11.4.2 Pathway 2: life history-associated factors 263 11.4.3 Pathway 3: excessive and uncontrolled defence mechanisms 264 11.4.4 Pathway 4: losing the evolutionary arms race 264 11.4.5 Pathway 5: results of evolutionary constraints 265 11.4.6 Pathway 6: an apparently harmful alíele is maintained by balancing selection 266 11.4.7 Pathway 7: sexual selection and competition and their consequences 266 11.4.8 Pathway 8: the outcomes of demographic history 267 11.5 Cultural evolution and disease 268 11.6 Evolutionary perspectives and cancer 268 11.6.1 Evolutionarily novel environments and cancer 269 11.6.2 Relationships to life history traits 270 11.6.3 Cancer and the evolutionary arms race 271 11.6.4 Demographic history 271 11.7 Understanding disease from an evolutionary perspective 272 11.7.1 The medical history 272 11.7.2 An evolutionary evaluation of clinical signs and symptoms 272 11.8 Implications for prevention and therapy 273 11.9 The challenges of an evolutionary perspective in medicine 274 11.10 Conclusion 275 Key points 275 Further reading 276 12 Coda: evolution, medicine, and society 277 12.1 Society and evolution 277 12.2 Religion and evolution 279 12.3 Social Darwinism, eugenics, and political thought 279 12.4 Research directions 281 12.5 The future of Homo sapiens 281 Further reading 282 Index 283 Evolutionary science is critical to an understanding of integrated human biology and is increasingly recognised as a core underpinning discipline by medical and public health professionals. Advances in the fields of genomics, epigenetics, developmental biology, and epidemiology have led to the grow¬ ing realisation that incorporating evolutionary thinking is essential for medicine to achieve its full potential. This is the first integrated and comprehensive textbook to explain the principles of evolutionary biology from a medical perspective and to focus on how medicine and public health might utilise evolutionary biology. It is written in a style which is accessible to a broad range of readers, whether or not they have had formal exposure to evolutionary science. Principles of Evolutionary Medicine is divided into three sections: the first provides a systematic approach to the principles of evolutionary biology as they apply to human health and disease, using examples specifically relevant to medicine. It incorporates chapters on evolutionary processes, molecular evolution, the evolution of humans, life history theory, and evolutionary-developmental biology. The second part illustrates the application of these principles to our understanding of nutrition and metabolism, reproduction, combatting infectious disease and stress, and human behaviour. The final section provides a general frame¬ work to show in practical terms how the principles of evolutionary medicine can be applied in medical practice and public health. This novel textbook provides the necessary toolkit for doctors and other health professionals, medical students and biomedical scientists, as well as anthropologists interested in human health, to gain a better understanding of the evolutionary processes underlying human health and disease.
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author Gluckman, Peter D. 1949-
Beedle, Alan
Hanson, Mark A. 1949-
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Beedle, Alan
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Genetik (DE-588)4071711-2 gnd
subject_GND (DE-588)7718082-3
(DE-588)4002230-4
(DE-588)4153283-1
(DE-588)4071711-2
title Principles of evolutionary medicine
title_auth Principles of evolutionary medicine
title_exact_search Principles of evolutionary medicine
title_full Principles of evolutionary medicine Peter Gluckman ; Alan Beedle ; Mark Hanson
title_fullStr Principles of evolutionary medicine Peter Gluckman ; Alan Beedle ; Mark Hanson
title_full_unstemmed Principles of evolutionary medicine Peter Gluckman ; Alan Beedle ; Mark Hanson
title_short Principles of evolutionary medicine
title_sort principles of evolutionary medicine
topic Medical anthropology
Human evolution
Medical genetics
Evolutionsmedizin (DE-588)7718082-3 gnd
Anthropologie (DE-588)4002230-4 gnd
Evolutionsbiologie (DE-588)4153283-1 gnd
Genetik (DE-588)4071711-2 gnd
topic_facet Medical anthropology
Human evolution
Medical genetics
Evolutionsmedizin
Anthropologie
Evolutionsbiologie
Genetik
url http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017991967&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA
http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017991967&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA
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AT beedlealan principlesofevolutionarymedicine
AT hansonmarka principlesofevolutionarymedicine