Diabetes, Vol 40, Issue 2 161-165, Copyright © 1991 by American Diabetes Association
Archaeology of NIDDM. Excavation of the "thrifty" genotype
M Wendorf and ID Goldfine
Archaeological Research Facility, University of California, Berkeley.
Since the 1940s, numerous cases of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus
(NIDDM) have been observed in certain American Indian populations.
Extremely high prevalence rates of NIDDM occur most strikingly in several
tribes of Paleo-Indians, whose ancestors migrated to North America greater
than 11,000 yr ago. Archaeological evidence from that period indicates that
certain groups of Paleo-Indians maintained an arctic-like hunter-gatherer
life-style in an area in temperate North America ranging from Wyoming to
Arizona. This life-style featured a reliance on unpredictable big game
species as a major food source. However, at this time, big game species
were becoming extinct. It is hypothesized that those Paleo-Indians who
relied on big game as a food source developed a "thrifty" genotype that
allowed a selective advantage during the periods of fasting that occurred
between big game kills. It also is hypothesized that this thrifty genotype
in these Indians may contribute to NIDDM when a sedentary life-style is
adopted and food sources are constant. Because insulin resistance in muscle
is a major feature of NIDDM, it is possible that insulin resistance per se
is the phenotypic expression of the thrifty genotype.