Toxoplasma and reaction time: Role of toxoplasmosis in the origin, preservation and geographical distribution of Rh blood group polymorphism
Novotná, M., Havlícek, J., Smith, A.P., Kolbeková, P., Skallová, A., Klose, J, Gasová ,Z., Písacka, M., Sechovská, M. , Flegr, J.
Parasitology 2008; 135: 1253-1261
Click for abstract
The RhD protein which is the
RHD
gene product and a major component of the Rh blood group system carries the
strongest blood group immunogen, the D-antigen. This antigen is absent in a significant minority of the human population
(RhD-negatives) due to
RHD
deletion or alternation. The origin and persistence of this RhD polymorphism is an old
evolutionary enigma. Before the advent of modern medicine, the carriers of the rarer allele (e.g. RhD-negative women in
the population of RhD-positives or RhD-positive men in the population of RhD-negatives) were at a disadvantage as some
of their children (RhD-positive children born to pre-immunized RhD-negative mothers) were at a higher risk of foetal or
newborn death or health impairment from haemolytic disease. Therefore, the RhD-polymorphism should be unstable,
unless the disadvantage of carriers of the locally less abundant allele is counterbalanced by, for example, higher viability of
the heterozygotes. Here we demonstrated for the first time that among
Toxoplasma
-free subjects the RhD-negative men
had faster reaction times than Rh-positive subjects and showed that heterozygous men with both the RhD plus and RhD
minus alleles were protected against prolongation of reaction times caused by infection with the common protozoan parasite
Toxoplasma gondii
. Our results suggest that the balancing selection favouring heterozygotes could explain the origin and
stability of the RhD polymorphism. Moreover, an unequal prevalence of toxoplasmosis in different countries could explain
pronounced differences in frequencies of RhD-negative phenotype in geographically distinct populations