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The Death of the ‘ Thrifty Genotype’ : Type-II Diabetes Among Native American Populations. James T. Watson, Ph.D. Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis Department of Anthropology. Diabetes. Diabetes is a disease in which the body does not produce or properly use insulin.
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The Death of the‘Thrifty Genotype’ :Type-II Diabetes Among Native American Populations James T. Watson, Ph.D. Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis Department of Anthropology
Diabetes • Diabetes is a disease in which the body does not produce or properly use insulin. • Insulin = hormone needed to convert sugar, starches and other food into energy. • Affected in US (ADA): • Diagnosed: 14.6 million people • Undiagnosed: 6.2 million people • Pre-diabetes: 54 million people • The cause of diabetes continues to be a mystery… both genetics and environmental factors (obesity and lack of exercise) appear to play roles (ADA).
Diabetes • Type 1 (IDDM): autoimmune disease results in the body's failure to produce insulin. • Only ~5-10% of Americans diagnosed with type 1. • Type 2 (NIDDM): results from insulin resistance, and relative insulin deficiency. • Most Americans diagnosed have type 2. • Gestational: high blood sugar (glucose) levels during pregnancy. • Affects ~4% of all pregnant women.
A Native Disease • US Native Americans: prevalence up to ~50% of adults over age 35 (highest rates in the world) Prevalence Groups (Young, 1990): • High = >30% (e.g. - Pima, Havasupai, Oji-Cree) • Moderate (intermediate groups) • Low = <10% (e.g. - Aleut, Eskimo/Inuit, Sub-Arctic Athabaskans)
Culture History • Intruders and reservation life (post-1600)… • Subjugation • Poverty • Poor nutrition and starvation • Post-1950 increases in resources
A Native Disease of Global Scale • Canada: prevalence rates among First Americans vary from 2-40%. • Hawaii: native Hawaiians have a diabetes-related mortality rate 6X that for general U.S. population. • High rates also found among native peoples throughout the world. from Diamond (2003)
Explanations ‘Thirfty Genotype’ Model (Neel, 1962; 1982; 1999) • 99% of human history as hunter-gatherers experiencing feast and famine cycles. • Postulated existence of metabolically ‘thrifty’ genes....individuals with a ‘thrifty’ metabolism favored (selective advantage).
Thrifty Genotype Thrifty Genes: • Individuals with high levels of insulin or a “quick insulin trigger” for better fat storage…more efficient food utilization and rapid weight gain at times of food abundance. • Thrifty genotype is maladaptive with modern, steady high-calorie diets and sedentary lifestyle. • Recently acculturated native groups experience high rates of type 2 diabetes…the result of ‘telescoping’ genes that Europeans diluted over many generations (Neel, 1982).
Genetic Disease??? • Type-I genes? • HRA alleles DR3 and DR4 • Type-II gene(s)? Polygenetic? • ADRB3, G308A, G250C (Jaquet et al., 2002) • D11S4464 (Duggirala et al., 2003) • Chromosome regions 3q21-q24, 4p15-q12, 9q21, 22q12-q13 (Baier and Hanson, 2004) • Etc… • Diabetes epidemic among zoo primates. • Shared genes? (Diamond, 2003)
Genetic Determinism • Genetic models guide modern research paradigms… “Type 2 diabetes is a lifestyle disorder with the highest prevalence seen in populations that have a heightened genetic susceptibility; environmental factors associated with lifestyle unmask the disease” (Diamond, 2003). • But modern DNA links inconclusive…
Testing the Thrifty Genotype • Test basic assumptions of Thrifty Genotype Hypothesis… • Quantitative assessment of food availability and security • Analyzed data from nutritional assessments of 118 global societies (Whiting, 1958) representing basic economic dichotomy proposed by Neel (1968). From Benyshek and Watson (2006)
Food Availability and Security • No significant differences (α = .05) exist between foragers and agriculturalists with regard to… • Quantity of food available • Frequency of food shortages • Extent of food shortages
Hunter-Gatherer Complexity Stereotype = “Hunter-gatherers move around a lot and live in small groups” • Based on extant, marginalized groups. Conditions for more complexity… • Higher-than normal pop, concentrated in relatively small areas such as river valleys and coastlines. • More diverse, specialized food gathering. • Highly developed food procurement and processing technologies. • Food storage and preservation. • Permanent (or nearly) settlements. • Division of labor. • Simple social ranking. • Trade. • More elaborate ritual and ceremonial beliefs.
Natural Selection and Thrifty Genes No archaeological evidence for episodes of natural selection for ‘thrifty genes’ • Demographic transitions • 40,000 bp (Paleolithic revolution) • 15,000 bp (first Americans) • 10,000 bp (Neolithic revolution) • Pima (2000 BC) • Europeans (4000 BC)
Alternative Explanations Phenotypic Plasticity… ”Thrifty Phenotype Hypothesis” (Hales and Barker, 1992): • Native Americans with high rates share history of deprivation…expressed 40-50 years later when risk-factors (e.g.-obesity) first emerged in their communities. Developmental Origins (Barker, 1998): • Type 2 Diabetes passed on to later generations via hyperglycemic pregnancies. • Deprivation followed by periods of overnutrition and reduced activity, then passed on through phenotypic plasticity (fetal physiological responses). Nature Genetics 19:209-210 (McCarthy, 1998)
New Approaches to Prevention • Improved prenatal care/nutrition may be best hope to slow or reverse the epidemic in high prevalence communities (Benyshek, 2005) • In Native American communities, prevention efforts that acknowledge fetal programming research are likely to: • Resonate better with local explanatory and folk models of diabetes etiology • Provide real sense of hope for the future health of the community • Thus, likely enjoy greater community support and participation in local prevention programs
Society and Disease • Type 2 Diabetes: Result of maladaptation to our cultural environment (food and activity). • Cultural explanations… • Cultural trauma • Hypertension among African Americans