Literature DB >> 24767939

Big brains, meat, tuberculosis and the nicotinamide switches: co-evolutionary relationships with modern repercussions on longevity and disease?

Adrian C Williams1, Robin I M Dunbar2.   

Abstract

Meat eating has been an important trigger for human evolution however the responsible component in meat has not been clearly identified. Here we propose that the limiting factors for expanding brains and increasing longevity were the micronutrient nicotinamide (vitamin B3) and the metabolically related essential amino-acid, tryptophan. Meat offers significant sourcing challenges and lack causes a deficiency of nicotinamide and tryptophan and consequently the energy carrier nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) that gets consumed in regulatory circuits important for survival, resulting in premature ageing, poor cognition and brain atrophy. If a trophic supply of dietary nicotinamide/tryptophan is so essential for building brains, constraining their size and connectivity, we hypothesise that back-up mechanisms to ensure the supply evolved. One strategy may be increasing the reliance on gut symbionts to break down celluloses that produces NADH and only nicotinamide indirectly, and may cause diarrhoea. We suggest that a direct supplier was the chronic mycobacterial infection tuberculosis (TB) that is a surprise candidate but it co-evolved early, does not inevitably cause disease (90-95% of those infected are healthy), and secretes (and is inhibited by) nicotinamide. We hypothesise that TB evolved first as a symbiont that enabled humans to cope with short-lived shortages of meat and only later behaved as a pathogen when the supply deteriorated chronically, for those in poverty. (TB immunology and epidemiology is riddled with paradoxes for a conventional pathogen). We test this in pilot data showing that sharp declines in TB (and diarrhoea) - `environmental enteropathy' strongly correlate with increasing meat consumption and therefore nicotinamide exposure, unlike later onset cancers and Parkinson's disease that increased in incidence, perhaps - as we propose a hypothetical hypervitaminosis B3 (to include obesity and the metabolic syndrome) - as the trade-off for increased brain power and longevity, a recently evolved human characteristic.
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24767939     DOI: 10.1016/j.mehy.2014.04.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Hypotheses        ISSN: 0306-9877            Impact factor:   1.538


  6 in total

Review 1.  Ecology and evolution of Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

Authors:  Sebastien Gagneux
Journal:  Nat Rev Microbiol       Date:  2018-02-19       Impact factor: 60.633

2.  Quantitative measurement of redox state in human brain by 31 P MRS at 7T with spectral simplification and inclusion of multiple nucleotide sugar components in data analysis.

Authors:  Jimin Ren; Craig R Malloy; A Dean Sherry
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2020-05-09       Impact factor: 4.668

Review 3.  NAD(+) Metabolism and the Control of Energy Homeostasis: A Balancing Act between Mitochondria and the Nucleus.

Authors:  Carles Cantó; Keir J Menzies; Johan Auwerx
Journal:  Cell Metab       Date:  2015-06-25       Impact factor: 27.287

Review 4.  Friends with social benefits: host-microbe interactions as a driver of brain evolution and development?

Authors:  Roman M Stilling; Seth R Bordenstein; Timothy G Dinan; John F Cryan
Journal:  Front Cell Infect Microbiol       Date:  2014-10-29       Impact factor: 5.293

Review 5.  Meat Intake and the Dose of Vitamin B3 - Nicotinamide: Cause of the Causes of Disease Transitions, Health Divides, and Health Futures?

Authors:  Lisa J Hill; Adrian C Williams
Journal:  Int J Tryptophan Res       Date:  2017-05-03

Review 6.  Evolutionary pressures rendered by animal husbandry practices for avian influenza viruses to adapt to humans.

Authors:  Maristela Martins de Camargo; Alexandre Rodrigues Caetano; Isabel Kinney Ferreira de Miranda Santos
Journal:  iScience       Date:  2022-03-01
  6 in total

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