PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Researchers conclude that what causes menopause is -- wait for it -- men

2013-06-14
(Press-News.org) HAMILTON, ON, June 13, 2013 — After decades of laboring under other theories that never seemed to add up, a team led by biologist Rama Singh has concluded that what causes menopause in women is men.

Singh, an evolutionary geneticist, backed by computer models developed by colleagues Jonathan Stone and Richard Morton, has determined that menopause is actually an unintended outcome of natural selection – the result of its effects having become relaxed in older women.

Over time, human males have shown a preference for younger women in selecting mates, stacking the Darwinian deck against continued fertility in older women, the researchers have found.

"In a sense it is like aging, but it is different because it is an all-or-nothing process that has been accelerated because of preferential mating," says Singh, a professor in McMaster's Department of Biology whose research specialties include the evolution of human diversity.

Stone is an associate professor in the Department of Biology and associate director of McMaster's Origins Institute, whose themes include the origins of humanity, while Morton is a professor emeritus in Biology.

While conventional thinking has held that menopause prevents older women from continuing to reproduce, in fact, the researchers' new theory says it is the lack of reproduction that has given rise to menopause.

Their work appears in the online, open-access journal PLOS Computational Biology. The paper is available here: http://www.ploscompbiol.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003092.

Menopause is believed to be unique to humans, but no one had yet been able to offer a satisfactory explanation for why it occurs, Singh says.

The prevailing "grandmother theory" holds that women have evolved to become infertile after a certain age to allow them to assist with rearing grandchildren, thus improving the survival of kin. Singh says that does not add up from an evolutionary perspective.

"How do you evolve infertility? It is contrary to the whole notion of natural selection. Natural selection selects for fertility, for reproduction -- not for stopping it," he says.

The new theory holds that, over time, competition among men of all ages for younger mates has left older females with much less chance of reproducing. The forces of natural selection, Singh says, are concerned only with the survival of the species through individual fitness, so they protect fertility in women while they are most likely to reproduce.

After that period, natural selection ceases to quell the genetic mutations that ultimately bring on menopause, leaving women not only infertile, but also vulnerable to a host of health problems.

"This theory says that natural selection doesn't have to do anything," Singh says. "If women were reproducing all along, and there were no preference against older women, women would be reproducing like men are for their whole lives."

The development of menopause, then, was not a change that improved the survival of the species, but one that merely recognized that fertility did not serve any ongoing purpose beyond a certain age.

For the vast majority of other animals, fertility continues until death, Singh explains, but women continue to live past their fertility because men remain fertile throughout their lives, and longevity is not inherited by gender.

Singh points out that if women had historically been the ones to select younger mates, the situation would have been reversed, with men losing fertility.

The consequence of menopause, however, is not only lost fertility for women, but an increased risk of illness and death that arises with hormonal changes that occur with menopause. Singh says a benefit of the new research could be to suggest that if menopause developed over time, that ultimately it could also be reversed.

INFORMATION:

McMaster University, one of four Canadian universities listed among the Top 100 universities in the world, is renowned for its innovation in both learning and discovery. It has a student population of 23,000, and more than 156,000 alumni in 140 countries.

For more information please contact:

Wade Hemsworth
Public Relations Manager
McMaster University
905-525-9140, ext. 27988
hemswor@mcmaster.ca

Michelle Donovan
Public Relations Manager
McMaster University
905-525-9140, ext. 22869
donovam@mcmaster.ca

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

UCSB researchers identify the mechanisms underlying salt-mediated behaviors in fruit flies

2013-06-14
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — Next time you see a fruit fly in your kitchen, don't swat it. That fly could have a major impact on our progress in deciphering sensory biology and animal behavior, including someday providing a better understanding of the human brain. UC Santa Barbara researchers in the Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology (MCDB) and the Neuroscience Research Institute (NRI) have been studying the mechanisms underlying salt taste coding of Drosophila (fruit flies). And they have made some rather remarkable discoveries. Their findings ...

Study shows how diving mammals evolved underwater endurance

2013-06-14
Scientists at the University of Liverpool have shed new light on how diving mammals, such as the sperm whale, have evolved to survive for long periods underwater without breathing. The team identified a distinctive molecular signature of the oxygen-binding protein myoglobin in the sperm whale and other diving mammals, which allowed them to trace the evolution of the muscle oxygen stores in more than 100 mammalian species, including their fossil ancestors. Myoglobin, which gives meat its red colour, is present in high concentrations in elite mammalian divers, so high ...

Be gone, bacteria

2013-06-14
Staph infections in hospitals are a serious concern, so much so that the term Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is as commonly known as MRI. Far less known is that in many of these cases, patients are infecting themselves. In heart surgeries and knee and joint-replacement procedures, up to 85 percent of staph infections after surgery come from patients' own bacteria, according to a 2002 study in the New England Journal of Medicine. Despite the threat that staph bacteria pose to patients, there is no uniformly accepted procedure to reduce surgical-site ...

Could novel drug target autism and fetal alcohol disorder?

2013-06-14
CHICAGO --- In a surprising new finding, a Northwestern Medicine® study has found a common molecular vulnerability in autism and fetal alcohol spectrum disorder. Both disorders have symptoms of social impairment and originate during brain development in utero. This the first research to explore a common mechanism for these disorders and link their molecular vulnerabilities. The study found male offspring of rat mothers who were given alcohol during pregnancy have social impairment and altered levels of autism-related genes found in humans. Female offspring were ...

Unraveling the genetic mystery of medieval leprosy

2013-06-14
Why was there a sudden drop in the incidence of leprosy at the end of the Middle Ages? To answer this question, biologists and archeologists reconstructed the genomes of medieval strains of the pathogen responsible for the disease, which they exhumed from centuries old human graves. Their results, published in the journal Science, shed light on this obscure historical period and introduce new methods for understanding epidemics. In Medieval Europe, leprosy was a common disease. The specter of the leper remains firmly entrenched in our collective memory: a person wrapped ...

Frontiers news briefs: June 13

2013-06-14
Frontiers in Microbiology Insights into fungal communities in composts revealed by 454-pyrosequencing: Implications for human health and safety Composting is a process for converting waste into materials beneficial for plant growth through the action of microbes, especially of fungi which can break down large molecules. But fungi involved in composting are not always harmless. Vidya De Gannes and colleagues show that composts can contain more fungi that are potentially harmful to humans than was previously realized. Using intensive DNA-sequencing to analyze fungal ...

Satellite data will be essential to future of groundwater, flood and drought management

2013-06-14
Irvine, Calif., June 10, 2013 – New satellite imagery reveals that several areas across the United States are all but certain to suffer water-related catastrophes, including extreme flooding, drought and groundwater depletion. The paper, to be published in Science this Friday, June 14, underscores the urgent need to address these current and rapidly emerging water issues at the national scale. "We don't recognize the dire water situation that we face here in the United States," said lead author Jay Famiglietti, a professor of Earth System Science at the University of ...

Experts propose restoring invisible and abandoned trials 'to correct the scientific record'

2013-06-14
Sponsors and researchers will be given one year to act before independent scientists begin publishing the results themselves using previously confidential trial documents. The BMJ and PLOS Medicine have already endorsed the proposal and committed to publishing restorative clinical trial submissions - and will discuss it in more detail at a meeting in London on Friday 14 June 2013. Unpublished and misreported studies make it difficult to determine the true value of a treatment. Around half of all clinical trials for the medicines we use today have never been published ...

Severe maternal complications less common during home births

2013-06-14
However, the authors stress that the overall risk of severe problems is small and the results are significant only for women who have previously given birth – not for first-time mums. The relative safety of planned home births is a topic of continuous debate, but studies have so far been too small to compare severe maternal complications between planned home and planned hospital birth among low risk women. Of all Western countries, the Netherlands has the highest percentage of home births, assisted by a primary care midwife. So a team of Dutch researchers decided ...

Putting flesh on the bones of ancient fish

2013-06-14
Grenoble, 12 June 2013: Swedish, Australian and French researchers present for the first time miraculously preserved musculature of 380 million year old armoured fish discovered in north-west Australia. This research will help scientists to better understand how neck and abdominal muscles evolved during the transition from jawless to jawed vertebrates. The scientific paper describing the discovery is published today in the journal Science. The team of scientists who studied the fossilised fish was jointly directed by Prof. Kate Trinajstic, Curtin University, Perth, Australia ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

NSF–DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory spots record-breaking asteroid in pre-survey observations

Ribosomal engineering creates “super-probiotic” bacteria

This self-powered eye tracker harnesses energy from blinking and is as comfortable as everyday glasses

Adverse prenatal exposures linked to higher rates of mental health issues, brain changes in adolescents

Restoring mitochondria shows promise for treating chronic nerve pain   

Nature study identifies a molecular switch that controls transitions between single-celled and multicellular forms

USU chemists' CRISPR discovery could lead to single diagnostic test for COVID, flu, RSV

Early hominins from Morocco reveal an African lineage near the root of Homo sapiens

Small chimps, big risks: What chimps show us about our own behavior

We finally know how the most common types of planets are created

Thirty-year risk of cardiovascular disease among healthy women according to clinical thresholds of lipoprotein(a)

Yoga for opioid withdrawal and autonomic regulation

Gene therapy ‘switch’ may offer non-addictive pain relief

Study shows your genes determine how fast your DNA mutates with age

Common brain parasite can infect your immune cells. Here's why that's probably OK

International experts connect infections and aging through cellular senescence

An AI–DFT integrated framework accelerates materials discovery and design

Twist to reshape, shift to transform: Bilayer structure enables multifunctional imaging

CUNY Graduate Center and its academic partners awarded more than $1M by Google.org to advance statewide AI education through the Empire AI consortium

Mount Sinai Health system receives $8.5 million NIH grant renewal to advance research on long-term outcomes in children with congenital heart disease

Researchers develop treatment for advanced prostate cancer that could eliminate severe side effects

Keck Medicine of USC names Christian Pass chief financial officer

Inflatable fabric robotic arm picks apples

MD Anderson and SOPHiA GENETICS announce strategic collaboration to accelerate AI-driven precision oncology

Oil residues can travel over 5,000 miles on ocean debris, study finds

Korea University researchers discover that cholesterol-lowering drug can overcome chemotherapy resistance in triple-negative breast cancer

Ushikuvirus: A newly discovered giant virus may offer clues to the origin of life

Boosting the cell’s own cleanup

Movement matters: Light activity led to better survival in diabetes, heart, kidney disease

Method developed to identify best treatment combinations for glioblastoma based on unique cellular targets

[Press-News.org] Researchers conclude that what causes menopause is -- wait for it -- men