Scientific News Biology The theories and researches of life WHAT CAME FIRST? BIGGER BRAINS OR LOTS OF SEX?
WHAT CAME FIRST? BIGGER BRAINS OR LOTS OF SEX?
LOW fertility and frequent pregnancy complications may be the price that we
have paid for evolving a large brain.
For the fetus to get enough nutrients to grow a hefty brain the placenta has
to aggressively invade a mother's uterus, says a new theory. But that can also
provoke her immune system, causing dangerous complications.
However, recent research suggests that exposure to a man's semen helps a
women's immune system prepare for pregnancy (New Scientist, 9 February, p 32).
So low fertility in humans reduces complications during pregnancy by giving a
woman's immune system more time to adapt. Human fetuses spend 60 per cent of
their energy on their brain, 3 times as much as other mammals. Twenty weeks into
pregnancy, the placenta attacks the uterine wall for a second time, burrowing in
more deeply than in any other mammal.
But burrowing deeper is risky. It can provoke the mother's immune system to
attack the placenta, which is loaded with foreign genes from the father. This
can trigger pre-eclampsia, where the placenta leaks toxins into the mother's
circulation, causing blood pressure to spike dangerously. Within hours it can
escalate into kidney failure, brain haemorrhaging and death.
It is thought that humans are the only mammals to suffer frequent pre-eclampsia, which occurs in 3 per cent of
pregnancies. We are also far less fertile: a bitch that mates just once when it is on heat usually gets
pregnant,
yet women typically take six months to conceive.
Research by Pierre-Yves Robillard, a neonatologist at Sud RŽunion
Hospital on the Indian Ocean island of RŽunion, has shown that women who
have sex with the father for over a year before getting pregnant have a 5 per
cent chance of developing high blood pressure and pre-eclampsia compared with a
massive 40 per cent chance for those who have only been having sex with the
father for four months or less.
Robillard is now proposing that this is why we are less fertile- the extra
sex gives women a better chance of surviving the placental invasion. "If we
had kept the same fertility as other mammals, we would have pre-eclampsia rates
of 20 per cent," he told a workshop about pre-eclampsia in Mauritius.
"Humans could not have survived."
The theory has generated both interest and scepticism. "It's an
interesting idea that placental invasiveness has something to do with brain
expansion," says David Haig, an evolutionary biologist at Harvard
University, "but other possibilities can't be eliminated." For example,
pre-eclampsia may have become more common as societies became better at caring
for ailing mothers and babies.
And Robert Martin, an anthropologist at The Field Museum in Chicago,
questions whether invasive placentas are linked to larger brains. "Dolphins
have a non-invasive placenta," he says, "yet the next biggest brain
sizes after humans are found in dolphins."
Contact: Claire Bowles, claire.bowles@rbi.co.uk,
44-207-331-2751, New
Scientist
Source of the given news and the copyrights belong to a
New
Scientist
Publishing date: November 26, 2002
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