Article

Fitness consequences of advanced ancestral age over three generations in humans

Details

Citation

Hayward A, Lummaa V & Bazykin GA (2015) Fitness consequences of advanced ancestral age over three generations in humans. PLoS ONE, 10 (6), Art. No.: e0128197. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0128197

Abstract
A rapid rise in age at parenthood in contemporary societies has increased interest in reports of higher prevalence ofde novomutations and health problems in individuals with older fathers, but the fitness consequences of such age effects over several generations remain untested. Here, we use extensive pedigree data on seven pre-industrial Finnish populations to show how the ages of ancestors for up to three generations are associated with fitness traits. Individuals whose fathers, grandfathers and great-grandfathers fathered their lineage on average under age 30 were ~13% more likely to survive to adulthood than those whose ancestors fathered their lineage at over 40 years. In addition, females had a lower probability of marriage if their male ancestors were older. These findings are consistent with an increase of the number of accumulatedde novomutations with male age, suggesting that deleterious mutations acquired from recent ancestors may be a substantial burden to fitness in humans. However, possible non-mutational explanations for the observed associations are also discussed.

Journal
PLoS ONE: Volume 10, Issue 6

StatusPublished
Publication date01/06/2015
Publication date online01/06/2015
Date accepted by journal24/04/2015
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/22924
PublisherPublic Library of Science
eISSN1932-6203

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