Human genomic disease variants: A neutral evolutionary explanation
- Joel T Dudley1,
- Yuseob Kim2,
- Li Liu3,
- Glenn J Markov4,
- Kristyn Gerold5,
- Rong Chen1,
- Atul J Butte6 and
- Sudhir Kumar5,7
- 1 Stanford University;
- 2 Ewha Womans University, Seoul, 120-750, Korea;
- 3 Arizona State;
- 4 Arizona State and Stanford University;
- 5 Arizona State University;
- 6 Stanford University School of Medicine
- ↵* Corresponding author; email: s.kumar{at}asu.edu
Abstract
Many perspectives on the role of evolution in human health include non-empirical assumptions concerning the adaptive evolutionary origins of human diseases. Evolutionary analyses of the increasing wealth of clinical and population genomic data have begun to challenge these presumptions. In order to systematically evaluate such claims, the time has come to build a common framework for an empirical and intellectual unification of evolution and modern medicine. We review the emerging evidence and provide a supporting conceptual framework that establishes the classical Neutral Theory of Molecular Evolution (NTME) as the basis for evaluating disease- associated genomic variations in health and medicine. For over a decade, the NTME has already explained the origins and distribution of variants implicated in diseases and has illuminated the power of evolutionary thinking in genomic medicine. We suggest that a majority of disease variants in modern populations will have neutral evolutionary origins (previously-neutral), with a relatively smaller fraction exhibiting adaptive evolutionary origins (previously-adaptive). This pattern is expected to hold true for common as well as rare disease variants. Ultimately, a neutral evolutionary perspective will provide medicine with an informative and actionable framework that enables objective clinical assessment beyond convenient tendencies to invoke past adaptive events in human history as a root cause of human disease.
- Received October 20, 2011.
- Accepted May 30, 2012.
- © 2012, Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
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