Ancient DNA reveals that natural selection has upregulated the immune system over the last 10,000 years
Javier Maravall-López, Buu Truong, Gaspard Kerner, Yujie Zhao, Kangcheng Hou, Annabel Perry, Ali Akbari, David Reich, et al. (9 authors)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) · 2026-04
Abstract
The specific mechanisms through which human biology and disease susceptibility evolved with major shifts in West Eurasian environments and societies over the last 10,000 years( 1 )—particularly rising infectious burden( 2 )—remain poorly characterized, despite ancient DNA studies( 3-6 ) identifying hundreds of candidate loci under positive selection( 6 ). Here, we identify specific immune diseases/traits, genes/variants, pathways, and tissues/cell types impacted by natural selection by systematically integrating variant-level selection statistics with genome-wide association study (GWAS), quantitative trait locus (QTL), and molecular bulk/single-cell and gene pathway data. Genome-wide, positively-selected alleles are associated with reduced susceptibility to infectious diseases like tuberculosis (TB), influenza, and intestinal infections; consistent with selection-signal enrichments in immune cells within barrier tissues such as the respiratory tract and gut mucosa. In contrast, positively-selected alleles increase risk of intestinal inflammatory disease and autoimmune hypothyroidism, supportive of a tradeoff between infection and immune-mediated pathology, and consistent with adaptive alleles being QTLs for genes upregulating inflammation and other host-defense pathways. We reveal many novel adaptive loci with convergent signals from selection, infectious disease GWAS and immune-gene QTLs (including at FUT6 for intestinal infections; at ASAP1 for TB; and at LYZ , an antimicrobial enzyme), fine-mapping selection onto likely causal variants. Surprisingly, adaptive alleles had a protective effect on allergic conditions like asthma and dermatitis, challenging a common view that these conditions arose through evolutionary mismatch of present-day hygienic contexts relative to past, pathogen-rich environments( 7 ).
MeSH terms
- Biology
- Allele
- Immune system
- Natural selection
- Genetics
- Infectious disease (medical specialty)
- Locus (genetics)
- Disease
- Genome-wide association study
- Quantitative trait locus
- Immunology
- Tuberculosis
- Gene
- Acquired immune system
- Genetic association
- Expression quantitative trait loci
- Human leukocyte antigen
- Genome
- Genotype
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Innate immune system
- Negative selection