A1 Vertaisarvioitu alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä lehdessä

Testing the expensive-tissue hypothesis' prediction of inter-tissue competition using causal modelling with latent variables




TekijätBezerra, Meghan Shirley; Helle, Samuli; Seunarine, Kiran K.; Arthurs, Owen J.; Eaton, Simon; Williams, Jane E.; Clark, Chris A.; Wells, Jonathan C. K.

KustantajaCAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS

KustannuspaikkaCAMBRIDGE

Julkaisuvuosi2024

JournalEvolutionary Human Sciences

Tietokannassa oleva lehden nimiEVOLUTIONARY HUMAN SCIENCES

Lehden akronyymiEVOL HUM SCI

Artikkelin numero e33

Vuosikerta6

Sivujen määrä18

eISSN2513-843X

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1017/ehs.2024.26

Verkko-osoitehttps://doi.org/10.1017/ehs.2024.26

Rinnakkaistallenteen osoitehttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/458666070


Tiivistelmä
The expensive-tissue hypothesis (ETH) posited a brain-gut trade-off to explain how humans evolved large, costly brains. Versions of the ETH interrogating gut or other body tissues have been tested in non-human animals, but not humans. We collected brain and body composition data in 70 South Asian women and used structural equation modelling with instrumental variables, an approach that handles threats to causal inference including measurement error, unmeasured confounding and reverse causality. We tested a negative, causal effect of the latent construct 'nutritional investment in brain tissues' (MRI-derived brain volumes) on the construct 'nutritional investment in lean body tissues' (organ volume and skeletal muscle). We also predicted a negative causal effect of the brain latent on fat mass. We found negative causal estimates for both brain and lean tissue (-0.41, 95% CI, -1.13, 0.23) and brain and fat (-0.56, 95% CI, -2.46, 2.28). These results, although inconclusive, are consistent with theory and prior evidence of the brain trading off with lean and fat tissues, and they are an important step in assessing empirical evidence for the ETH in humans. Analyses using larger datasets, genetic data and causal modelling are required to build on these findings and expand the evidence base.

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Julkaisussa olevat rahoitustiedot
National Institute for Health Research, grant/award number NIHR-CS-012-002 (OJA); Wenner–Gren Foundation Dissertation Fieldwork Grant, grant/award number 8888 (MSB); Strategic Research Council, grant/award number 345183 (SH); Academy of Finland, grant/award number 317808, 320162, 325857, and 331400 (SH).


Last updated on 2025-27-01 at 19:20