Analysis of genomic and behavioral data from the vast UK Biobank finally demonstrates that genes that promote reproductive behaviors come with the ultimate price.
Aging stinks. You get marks on your skin, you’re slower, you forget stuff, and everything hurts. Your joints crack and pop. Evolution has achieved so many remarkable things; how is it possible that we still have to put up with growing old?
The antagonistic pleiotropy hypothesis states that your body falls apart when you’re old to pay the cost of being reproductively fit when you’re young. If the same gene has different effects (called pleiotropy) at different times of life—if it enhances your chances of reproduction when you’re young but is deleterious somehow once you get older—that gene will still undergo positive selection and remain in the population because reproduction is that important.
It’s an appealing idea, and there is some anecdotal evidence for it, but it has been very difficult to definitively demonstrate genetically—especially because both reproductive traits and life span are very much impacted by environmental factors and life choices, as well as by genes. But the UK Biobank has made that demonstration possible.
“An unprecedented opportunity”
The UK Biobank has the complete genomes of half a million British volunteers between the ages of 40 and 70. Those genomes are collated with the individuals’ blood pressure, heart rate, grip strength, bone density, arterial stiffness, vision, height, weight, hip and waist measurements, location, education level, employment and medical histories, diet and exercise habits, smoking and drinking status, etc. Volunteers were recruited between 2006 and 2010, and information was collected until 2016. And all of it is accessible to approved researchers around the globe.
One of those researchers is Jianzhi Zhang, whose laboratory website proclaims that “the Zhang lab is most interested in the relative roles of chance and necessity in evolution.” He used the data in the UK Biobank to try to answer the following question: Are genetic variants that influence reproduction more likely to affect life span than would be expected by chance? If so, is this association antagonistic? And are these variants that promote reproduction but also cause aging favored by natural selection? The answers are yes, yes, and yes.
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