Humans have at least one genetic disease – In the future could we have hundreds?

What is the point of having a blog if you are not going to engage in off-the-cuff speculation. So here goes-
Every one of our genes is under constant threat of mutation from radiation, free radicals and merely being mis-copied during replication (just to name a few). So it stands to reason that genes that encode attributes that don’t improve your chance of survival (or reproduction) will, given enough time, mutate to create a different attribute or eventually mutate completely out of existence! This loss of useless genes through mutation will be the focus of this theoretical warm wax and polish of a blog post.
So sometime in our evolutionary history we (what ever we were) could synthesize our own vitamin C (1). Many animals can still do it, like mice, elephants and lemurs, but we (like our fellow great apes) lost the ability around 60 million years ago (1). Vitamin C production in vertebrates requires three enzymes and only one of these enzymes has mutated out of existence in humans (we still have the other two) (1). So why did this happen? Well- we were eating enough vitamin C in our diet, so when the inevitable happened and one of our genes mutated, it did not affect our survival. Vitamin C production in animals that eat enough vitamin C is what’s called a “neutral trait”. Which basically means in the eyes of evolution it’s a bit of a “meh…..stay, go, I don’t care”.
So here’s where I’ll get a bit theoretical – if vitamin C production can become redundant because of diet, what could become redundant (in the eyes of evolution) because of modern medicine? Take diabetes as an example- type 1 diabetes used to be a death sentence, then a Polish doctor discovered that if you take out a dog’s pancreas, the dog’s urine becomes so sweet that flies flock to it as if it were some form of canine honey. This became the first animal model of type 1 diabetes. 30 years later Frederick Banting- a Canadian doctor- began the first treatment of a diabetic patient with animal pancreatic extract -aka- insulin (the first patient died from the impurities in the insulin, but they got better at it – see the side note). Now, thanks to genetically engineered yeast and bacteria producing insulin, type 1 diabetes barely affects life expectancy – perhaps reducing it by as little as 4 years in developed countries (2). Incredibly, new technology is being trialed where artificial pancreas are implanted into patients from a very young age. These machines will tightly regulate blood sugar levels, perhaps further improving the life expectancy of diabetic patients (3).

So here’s the big question – could insulin production become a “neutral trait” in the eyes of evolution? Could we start treating diabetes so well that it poses no survival pressure? Theoretically, the genes involved in insulin production would eventually (millions of years maybe) mutate out of existence in everyone. And why stop with diabetes? What about other diseases that in the future might be treated with apparatuses which administer a compound  to replace a spontaneously occurring deficiency. such as dopamine production in Parkinson’s sufferers or the production of Factor VIII in hemophiliacs. Will these diseases also become evolutionarily neutral and therefore eventually have a prevalence of 100%? After all, in the eyes of the Mouse, not being able to produce vitamin C would be considered a genetic disease, which 100% of all humans have.

Basically I’m saying all our organs will eventually be replaced by machines which we will monitor with our iPhone 7939.

Side note – diabetes was such an awful affliction, there used to be whole wards filled with comatose children on their literal deathbed. Once Frederick Banting had figured out the purification process of insulin, he began treating these children with fantastic results. One account describes Banting and his colleagues treating children in a ward filled with 50 comatose patients and their despairing parents. Going from bed to bed, they treated the entire ward with their purified insulin. By the time they reached the last terminal child, the first children were recovering from their coma to the relief and jubilation of their families.

  1. Drouin, Guy, Jean-Rémi Godin, and Benoît Pagé. “The Genetics of Vitamin C Loss in Vertebrates.” Current Genomics 12.5 (2011): 371–378. PMC.
  2. Miller, Rachel G. et al. “Improvements in the Life Expectancy of Type 1 Diabetes: The Pittsburgh Epidemiology of Diabetes Complications Study Cohort.” Diabetes 61.11 (2012): 2987–2992. PMC.
  3. Dassau, Eyal et al. “Clinical Evaluation of a Personalized Artificial Pancreas.”Diabetes Care 36.4 (2013): 801–809. PMC.

3 thoughts on “Humans have at least one genetic disease – In the future could we have hundreds?

  1. Peter Walker

    Excellent article that even I could understand Jack!

    One point I’d be interested in your thoughts on – I would assume the vitamin C gene mutated out of humans and Apes etc as we were ALL receiving enough in our diet. So if the majority of us do not have diabetes why would the insulin gene mutate out?

    Go easy on me, I’m just a Phedder!

    Reply
    1. jackrrivers Post author

      Hi Peter,

      It’s because all genes are under constant threat of mutation. So with the Vitamin C genes it’s not that we were getting enough Vitamin C SO evolution deemed we should get rid of it. It is just that all genes are under threat of mutation and so when there is a mutation that has no consequence to the survival of the animal it will eventually mutate in everyone. It’s a bit like Geocaches, given enough time all caches will weather and break, only the caches that are maintained survive. All genes will eventually weather and break unless they’re actively maintained (required) by natural selection.
      Some forms of type 1 diabetes are due a mutation in genes involved in insulin production. In developed countries these people get their insulin from modern medicine. These genes haven’t yet mutated in everyone, but it could and (if a health system could handle it) it wouldn’t effect peoples survival. This is similar to some time in mammalian history where some of our ancestor’s population had mutations in vitamin C production but it didn’t effect their survival as they were getting their Vitamin C from their diet.

      Reply
  2. jackrrivers Post author

    In the future we’d all need technological intervention to survive. Which for many of us isn’t far from the truth now. We all need clothes (especially in England) to survive, which is a form of technology. But several things would need to happen for my ridiculous prediction of a dystopian future to come true.

    First we would all need access to a top quality health care system. For most of the world type 1 diabetes has a huge impact on survival just because good health care isn’t available.

    Second a long time would need to pass (millions of years).

    Third- in that time we couldn’t develop technologies to avoid this buildup of mutations. For example GE humans, embryo selection etc. these technologies can’t be a factor. Which is unlikely.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Peter Walker Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published.