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Research: Genetics and Evolution of Longevity
Evolutionary Causes of Aging Two evolutionary models can explain the phenomenon of senescence. The
antagonistic-pleiotropy theory of senescence postulates that genetically-caused
correlations between fitness traits are the underlying cause of
senescence. These genetic correlations arise because individual genes
affect more than one trait (pleiotropy). It is these pleiotropic genes
that cause health and performance to decrease with advancing age. To
understand the theory, first assume that some alleles (variant forms of a gene) have pleiotropic
effects that are limited to certain ages (are age-specific in
expression). If an allele has beneficial effects at one age, but
deleterious effects at a different age, it is subject to conflicting
selection pressures. An example of such an allele would be one that
boosts production of a hormone that increases fertility during early
adulthood, but also increases risk of disease later in life. The
strength of selection acting on this allele is inversely proportional to
the age of expression. This is because late-life increases or decreases
in reproduction and survival have little effect on Darwinian fitness
compared to similar effects early in life (see figure above, based on
data from human males). Natural selection will thus tend to favor
alleles with beneficial early-age effects and deleterious late-age
effects. Conversely, alleles with the reverse pattern of action (early
deleterious effects and late beneficial effects) will be selected
against. As the frequency of the first type of allele increases in the
population and the frequency of the second type decreases, the
population will evolve a senescent life history. Individual differences
in longevity can be caused by polymorphism maintained by these genetic
'trade-offs'.
Causes of Mortality Plateaus Common experience and data on humans
suggest that mortality rates in a cohort should increase with age, (delete by
some function), after those individuals reach adulthood. Contrary to this
expectation, Carey et al. and Curtsinger et al. independently reported
experimental results showing that rates of aging after reaching adulthood can
plateau, or even become negative, at very late ages (1992). This has since been
found in both experimental organisms and in humans (Vaupel et al. 1998). Created 08/01/01 |