학술논문

Hormonal Evidence Supports the Theory of Selection in Utero
Document Type
article
Source
American Journal of Human Biology. 24(4)
Subject
hCG
pregnancy
sex ratio
population endocrinology
chorionic gonadotropin
article
biological model
birth rate
blood
cohort analysis
female
fetus death
genetic selection
human
infant mortality
live birth
male
newborn
physiological stress
pregnancy
reproductive fitness
sex ratio
spontaneous abortion
survival
time
United States
Abortion
Spontaneous
Birth Rate
California
Chorionic Gonadotropin
Cohort Studies
Female
Fetal Death
Genetic Fitness
Humans
Infant Mortality
Infant
Newborn
Live Birth
Male
Models
Biological
Pregnancy
Selection
Genetic
Sex Ratio
Stress
Physiological
Survival Analysis
Time Factors
Language
Abstract
ObjectivesAntagonists in the debate over whether the maternal stress response during pregnancy damages or culls fetuses have invoked the theory of selection in utero to support opposing positions. We describe how these opposing arguments arise from the same theory and offer a novel test to discriminate between them. Our test, rooted in reports from population endocrinology that human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) signals fetal fitness, contributes not only to the debate over the fetal origins of illness, but also to the more basic literature concerned with whether and how natural selection in utero affects contemporary human populations.MethodsWe linked maternal serum hCG measurements from prenatal screening tests with data from the California Department of Public Health birth registry for the years 2001–2007. We used time series analysis to test the association between the number of live born male singletons and median hCG concentration among males in monthly gestational cohorts.ResultsAmong the 1.56 million gestations in our analysis, we find that median hCG levels among male survivors of monthly conception cohorts rise as the number of male survivors falls.ConclusionsElevated median hCG among relatively small male birth cohorts supports the theory of selection in utero and suggests that the maternal stress response culls cohorts in gestation by raising the fitness criterion for survival to birth.