Background

Chronic inflammation is involved in the pathogenesis of chronic age-associated, degenerative diseases. Pro-inflammatory host responses that are deleterious later in life may originate from evolutionary selection for genetic variation mediating resistance to infectious diseases under adverse environmental conditions.

Methodology/principal findings

In the Upper-East region of Ghana where infection has remained the leading cause of death, we studied the effect on survival of genetic variations at the IL10 gene locus that have been associated with chronic diseases. Here we show that an IL10 haplotype that associated with a pro-inflammatory innate immune response, characterised by low IL-10 (p = 0.028) and high TNF-alpha levels (p = 1.39 x 10(-3)), was enriched among Ghanaian elders (p = 2.46 x 10(-6)). Furthermore, in an environment where the source of drinking water (wells/rivers vs. boreholes) influences mortality risks (HR 1.28, 95% CI [1.09-1.50]), we observed that carriers of the pro-inflammatory haplotype have a survival advantage when drinking from wells/rivers but a disadvantage when drinking from boreholes (p(interaction) = 0.013). Resequencing the IL10 gene region did not uncover any additional common variants in the pro-inflammatory haplotype to those SNPs that were initially genotyped.

Conclusions/significance

Altogether, these data lend strong arguments for the selection of pro-inflammatory host responses to overcome fatal infection and promote survival in adverse environments.

Overview publication

TitleSelection for genetic variation inducing pro-inflammatory responses under adverse environmental conditions in a Ghanaian population.
DateNovember 11th, 2009
Issue namePloS one
Issue numberv4.11:e7795
DOI10.1371/journal.pone.0007795
PubMed19907653
AuthorsKuningas M, May L, Tamm R, van Bodegom D, van den Biggelaar AH, Meij JJ, Frölich M, Ziem JB, Suchiman HE, Metspalu A, Slagboom PE & Westendorp RG
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