Why do we get sick? Genetic evidence for evolutionary trade-offs between fertility, longevity, and disease

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

The persistence of genetic variants that increase susceptibility to complex diseases poses an evolutionary paradox: despite their detrimental health effects, these variants are not eliminated by natural selection. Life-history theory proposes that trade-offs and pleiotropic effects across fitness components may explain the evolutionary maintenance of disease-associated alleles. We hypothesize that certain disease-risk alleles might segregate in the population because they confer reproductive advantages, even at the expense of late-life costs on health and longevity. Leveraging genome-wide association studies, we investigated genetic correlations and pleiotropic relationships between 62 complex diseases, longevity, and fertility. In our study, we estimated fertility by meta-analyzing complementary measures of offspring number and used parental lifespan as a proxy for longevity. We found that 85% of diseases showed negative genetic correlations with longevity, whereas 87% of diseases with significant correlations showed positive associations with fertility. Moreover, most disease-risk variants were associated with reduced longevity, even after accounting for socioeconomic confounders. Fertility-increasing alleles exhibited evolutionary signals consistent with adaptive selection despite having pleiotropic effects on disease-risk. Finally, we compared the number of offspring among individuals with high genetic risk of disease and found that, for most diseases, affected individuals had more offspring than disease-free individuals. However, for early-onset conditions, non-affected individuals exhibited higher fertility, highlighting the reproductive cost of early-onset diseases. These findings support the Antagonistic Pleiotropy theory, showing that alleles that enhance early-life reproductive success can persist despite late-life health costs. By uncovering these evolutionary trade-offs between reproduction, longevity, and disease risk, our study shows how Darwinian selection continues to shape contemporary patterns of human disease susceptibility. Understanding these evolutionary trade-offs can inform public health approaches and help anticipate unintended consequences of targeting disease-related genetic pathways.

Article activity feed