Mutations and the age pattern of death.
نویسنده
چکیده
The age pattern of death is what biologists and demographers think about when they consider mortality (or immortality). As everyone knows, human lives on average have nearly doubled in length over the past century (1), yet human mortality still increases exponentially fast (Fig. 1) as people age past 40. Not surprisingly, the health of older people is now a major concern (2), often focused on proximate factors, biological, economic and social, that affect health (3–5). However, a deeper question is, how did evolution shape the age pattern of mortality? In particular, is the rise in old-age mortality driven by an increase in the number and frequency of deleterious (i.e., bad for you) alleles? In PNAS, Wachter et al. (6) show how to compute the equilibrium distribution of deleterious mutant alleles in a large, age-structured, and genetically heterogeneous population. Their analysis is a significant advance over previous work on this question (7, 8). The problem that Wachter et al. (6) consider is a general one in population genetics. In any population, every individual experiences a continuing flux of mutations at a small rate, almost all deleterious in effect. The carrier of a deleterious mutant allele arising at one gene has a selective disadvantage and is eventually swept away. Recurrent mutation can repeatedly introduce a mutant allele so that, in the population, the frequency of the mutant allele is kept above zero by the balance between selection and mutation. There are other processes (9) by which alleles that sometimes (e.g., in some combinations) confer a selective disadvantage can be maintained in a population; this is not always a bad thing because evolution requires variation. However, any such process means, of course, that the population contains genotypes that are less fit than others, and so on the average fitness is not as high as it could be. The reduction in average fitness is called the genetic load (9). A single deleterious mutant allele can be held in a balance between mutation that injects new copies and selection that removes old ones. The equilibrium frequency depends on the fitness loss experienced by carriers of the mutation, and that loss depends on how the mutation affects individuals. For most plants and animals, fitness depends on the age pattern of reproduction and survival, and fitness is measured by the long-run growth rate or, for a population held at some limits, by the net reproductive rate. Hamilton (7) made a major breakthrough by answering the question: what is the loss in fitness produced by a mutation that has age-specific effect, i.e., reduces survival or increases fertility at just one age? One of his main conclusions was that such reductions had declining effect with age. Charlesworth (8) started from these results to compute the equilibrium distribution of mutations at each age. He assumed linearity of selection—the selective disadvantage of three copies of a mutation is three times that of a single copy—and predicted a rise in the frequency of deleterious mutations with age, as well as an eventual leveling-off that can result if every mutation affectsmany ages, not just one. His deservedly influential results provide an evolutionary reason for the pattern of old-age mortality (Fig. 1). This result is satisfying on the face of it but raises at least two questions that need answering. Is it reasonable to assume linear selection when, for example, we compare an individual carrying say three deleterious alleles (which need not be the same) to another with just one? And, because mutations strike at random, shouldn’t we analyze a heterogeneous population in which individuals differ by the number and kind of mutant alleles they carry? This is where Wachter et al. (6) come in. They measure selective cost for a genotype carrying some set of deleterious mutant alleles by (i) adding the age-specific changes 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 −9 −8 −7 −6 −5 −4 −3 −2 −1 0
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
دوره 110 25 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2013