‘Relationship between higher female fertility & Alzheimer's disease genetic mutation’

They have a long-standing relationship with the Tsimane to gather demographic and biomedical data while also providing medical care

Update: 2023-08-14 14:30 GMT

Representative Image (Photo: ANI)

CALIFORNIA: In the ageing population, the Apolipoprotein-4 allele has been associated with an increased risk for a variety of illnesses, particularly Alzheimer's and cardiovascular disease. Despite its negative effects, this genetic mutation is nevertheless prevalent in roughly 20 per cent of the population of humans.

In an effort to comprehend how this unfavourable allele is surviving natural selection, a group of scientists have discovered that the APOE-4 allele is connected to enhanced fertility in women.

Researchers from UC Santa Barbara anthropologist Michael Gurven and the Tsimane group in Bolivia, a forager-horticultural civilization, collaborated on a recent publication published in Science Advances to examine the implications of the gene from an evolutionary perspective.

Gurven, the senior author, and Benjamin Trumble, the lead author and an associate professor of evolutionary anthropology at Arizona State University's School of Human Evolution and Social Change, travelled to the Tsimane's home region in the Bolivian Amazon lowlands. They have a long-standing relationship with the Tsimane to gather demographic and biomedical data while also providing medical care.

They are co-directors of the Tsimane Health and Life History Project, which is also co-directed by Hillard Kaplan and Jonathan Stieglitz. This relationship has been in place for more than 20 years. The National Institute on Ageing has provided funding for the extensive interdisciplinary Tsimane Health and Life History Project, which brings together anthropologists, doctors, and medical experts from the United States and Bolivia.

With more than 17,000 people living across 90 villages, the Tsimanes’ agrarian lifestyle is more similar to human life prior to the Industrial Revolution than modern cities, offering a unique glimpse into health and ageing without the influences of modern-day amenities. “What we do is try to understand what human health was like prior to industrialization,” Trumble explained. “For 99 per cent of human history, we were hunter-gatherers.

The world we're living in today is really weird. It's this built environment that we've created that's very different from what it was throughout most of human evolution.” For this particular study, the researchers collected data from 795 Tsimane women, ranging in age from 13 to 90 years old.

The team of researchers not only retrieved genetic data to determine which alleles are prevalent for each individual but also detailed reproductive histories that provide information about their fertility, including the age of first birth, how long between births and the total number of live births.

They discovered that Tsimane women with the presence of one APOE-ε4 allele had an increase of 0.5 births, compared to those without the APOE-ε4 allele. The number of live births increased even more when there was the presence of two copies of the APOE-ε4 allele, where these women had an average of two more live births compared to those without this specific allele.

“What we found was that women with the APOE-ε4 allele began reproducing almost a year earlier and they had shorter interbirth intervals,” Trumble explained. “Those two things combined allow them to have about half an additional child if they have one copy or two additional children if they have two copies.” This advantageous effect on fertility could help to explain how an allele that has such a negative impact in one’s later life through the increased chances of developing Alzheimer’s and cardiovascular disease has not been weeded out by natural selection — the advantages take place in one’s early to mid-life years and therefore are passed along to their offspring.

“Genes that are associated with diseases that occur after reproduction is complete, are thought to be invisible to selection, in what is called ‘selection’s shadow,’” Gurven said. “If those same genes provide benefits to your fitness earlier in life, it would be even harder for selection to weed out those genes.”

Other, smaller studies have shown other advantageous aspects of the APOE-ε4 allele, including that children in Brazil are able to handle environmental pathogens and parasites, such as giardia, better than those without the allele, which resulted in better cognitive functions and higher growth rates.

This study builds on prior work showing other potential benefits of APOE-ε4 in the rural high-infection environment of the Tsimane. In one, the researchers showed that Tsimane APOE-ε4 carriers showed lower levels of inflammation when uninfected, but maintained higher blood lipid levels that buffer costs of immune activation during infection. In another, they showed that APOE-ε4 carriers were protected from cognitive declines, but only those who had experienced infection.

Even with these benefits of the APOE-ε4 allele that have been discovered, there is still the major deleterious effect of the increased risk of Alzheimer’s and cardiovascular disease in the later stages of life. Interestingly, this negative effect of the allele is mostly seen in Westernized nations. The Tsimane, for instance, have the lowest rates of dementia and Alzheimer’s in the world, as discovered by a large interdisciplinary team last year.

This is despite having the same 20 per cent prevalence of the APOE-ε4 allele in their population. What can this mean for understanding and treating the negative effects of the allele in areas affected the most? “We need to think outside the box and move beyond our focus on ‘this allele causes X disease’ and that's just how it is. Instead, we need to take a step back and ask, what about in different environments? What about in the environments in which humans evolved?” said Trumble.

“When we see that APOE-ε4 has different effects on our health in different environments, we need to think about the larger context in which those genes first evolved and are later maintained, like how our genes might hurt us in some settings, but help us in others,” said Gurven. “If we could figure out a way to mimic the conditions where APOE-ε4 doesn’t harm us, but may even help, that could launch a new path forward for disease prevention.”

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