TY - JOUR
T1 - Diet and Our Genetic Legacy in the Recent Anthropocene
T2 - A Darwinian Perspective to Nutritional Health
AU - Lucock, Mark D.
AU - Martin, Charlotte E.
AU - Yates, Zoe R.
AU - Veysey, Martin
PY - 2014/1
Y1 - 2014/1
N2 - Nutrient-gene research tends to focus on human disease, although such interactions are often a by-product of our evolutionary heritage. This review explores health in this context, reframing genetic variation/epigenetic phenomena linked to diet in the framework of our recent evolutionary past. This "Darwinian/evolutionary medicine" approach examines how diet helped us evolve among primates and to adapt (or fail to adapt) our metabolome to specific environmental conditions leading to major diseases of civilization. This review presents updated evidence from a diet-gene perspective, portraying discord that exists with respect to health and our overall nutritional, cultural, and activity patterns. While Darwinian theory goes beyond nutritional considerations, a significant component within this concept does relate to nutrition and the mismatch between genes, modern diet, obesogenic lifestyle, and health outcomes. The review argues that nutritional sciences should expand knowledge on the evolutionary connection between food and disease, assimilating it into clinical training with greater prominence.
AB - Nutrient-gene research tends to focus on human disease, although such interactions are often a by-product of our evolutionary heritage. This review explores health in this context, reframing genetic variation/epigenetic phenomena linked to diet in the framework of our recent evolutionary past. This "Darwinian/evolutionary medicine" approach examines how diet helped us evolve among primates and to adapt (or fail to adapt) our metabolome to specific environmental conditions leading to major diseases of civilization. This review presents updated evidence from a diet-gene perspective, portraying discord that exists with respect to health and our overall nutritional, cultural, and activity patterns. While Darwinian theory goes beyond nutritional considerations, a significant component within this concept does relate to nutrition and the mismatch between genes, modern diet, obesogenic lifestyle, and health outcomes. The review argues that nutritional sciences should expand knowledge on the evolutionary connection between food and disease, assimilating it into clinical training with greater prominence.
KW - Darwinian medicine
KW - epigenetics
KW - nutritional anthropology
KW - nutritional genetics
KW - preventative medicine
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84890907231&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/2156587213503345
DO - 10.1177/2156587213503345
M3 - Review article
C2 - 24647381
AN - SCOPUS:84890907231
SN - 2156-5872
VL - 19
SP - 68
EP - 83
JO - Journal of Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine
JF - Journal of Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine
IS - 1
ER -