Kemkes-Grottenthaler Ariane
Johannes Gutenberg University, Institute of Anthropology, Mainz, Germany.
Ann Hum Biol. 2004 Mar-Apr;31(2):139-58. doi: 10.1080/03014460410001663407.
Family studies provide support for a modest genetic influence on offspring life span, although the magnitude of these correlations is small.
The study aimed to clarify the relative contributions of parental age at birth and overall parental longevity on offspring lifespan, and to identify the biological and cultural mechanisms.
Information was derived from two village genealogies (1650-1927) encompassing 9979 births (5315 males, 4664 females). Data selection was guided by the inclusion of information about parental age at birth and lifespan, offspring lifespan and cohort-specific life expectancy.
Parental age at reproduction displayed a negative association with offspring survivability, which was caused by a host of biological as well as environmental factors. In contrast, parental lifespan was positively associated with offspring age at death. These effects differed by parent's and child's sex.
The maternal age effect on female progeny is thought to be indicative of a preferential genetic load. From an evolutionary point of view, direct selection for maternal lifespan may be an adaptive strategy to enhance child survival prospects.
家族研究为遗传因素对后代寿命有适度影响提供了支持,尽管这些相关性的程度较小。
该研究旨在阐明父母生育时的年龄和父母的总体寿命对后代寿命的相对贡献,并确定其生物学和文化机制。
信息来源于两个村庄的族谱(1650 - 1927年),涵盖9979例出生情况(5315名男性,4664名女性)。数据选择以包含父母生育时的年龄和寿命、后代寿命以及特定队列预期寿命的信息为导向。
父母生育时的年龄与后代的生存能力呈负相关,这是由一系列生物学和环境因素导致的。相比之下,父母的寿命与后代的死亡年龄呈正相关。这些影响因父母和孩子的性别而异。
母亲年龄对雌性后代的影响被认为表明了一种优先的遗传负荷。从进化的角度来看,直接选择母亲的寿命可能是一种提高孩子生存前景的适应性策略。