This image shows a Bajau diver hunting fish underwater using a traditional spear. |
"Humans are pretty plastic beings. We can adapt to a number of different extreme environments just through our lifestyle changes or our behavioral changes, so it wasn't necessarily likely that we would find an actual genetic adaptation to diving," says first author Melissa Ilardo, a doctoral student at the University of Copenhagen working with co-senior researchers Rasmus Nielsen (@ras_nielsen) of the University of California, Berkeley, and Eske Willerslev of the University of Copenhagen and the University of Cambridge. "The first sign that we were maybe onto something was when we saw that both the Bajau divers and non-divers had larger spleens than the Saluan, a nearby, non-diving population."
Spleen size is significant because of the organ's role in the human dive response, which occurs when our faces are submerged in water and we hold our breath. As our heart rate slows and blood vessels in our extremities constrict, the spleen contracts, releasing oxygenated red blood cells and making more oxygen available in the bloodstream. A larger spleen means that more oxygen gets released. Perhaps for this reason, large spleens have also been documented in diving seals.
The Bajau having larger spleens than their non-diving neighbors suggested that their diving culture had shaped their physiology. But the fact that non-divers and divers both had larger spleens suggested that it wasn't just a plastic response to spending so much time under water. There was likely something different about the Sea Nomads' DNA.
When the researchers scanned the genomes of the Bajau, they identified 25 sites that differed significantly from two comparison populations, the Saluan and the Han Chinese. Of these, one site on a gene known as PDE10A was found to be correlated with the Bajau's larger spleen size, even after accounting for confounding factors like age, sex, and height. In mice, PDE10A is known for regulating a thyroid hormone that controls spleen size, lending support for the idea that the Bajau might have evolved the spleen size necessary to sustain their long and frequent dives.
"The chance of finding evidence of population-specific natural selection, even in a population as extreme as the Bajau, was pretty slim. It was very exciting to find, and it just opens up so many possibilities," says Ilardo.
Understanding how the human body responds to a lack of oxygen, for instance, is important in a lot of medical contexts, from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease to surgery. Hypoxia has been well studied in populations living at high altitudes, where the lack of oxygen is much more chronic. But not as much research has been done on diving populations. "Here it's more of an acute hypoxia, almost similar to what's experienced with sleep apnea," she says. By making their data freely available to other researchers, she and her co-authors hope that some of what they've learned from the Bajau can be applied in medical contexts.
For the Bajau, Ilardo believes that the decision to participate in this research is about better understanding themselves. "I basically just showed up at the house of the chief of the village, this bizarre, foreign girl with an ultrasound machine asking about spleens," she says. "They're the most welcoming people I've ever met, but I wanted to make sure that they understood the science behind what I was doing, so that it wasn't just me taking measurements from them without giving back. And we do have a trip planned to return to the community to explain the results to them."
"They're explorers, so I think they're inherently curious and want to know more about the world, including about their own biology," she says.
Read more at Science Daily
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