Medical Hypotheses
Volume 54, Issue 5 , Pages 704-707, May 2000

The role of genetic factors in the etiology of seasonality and seasonal affective disorder: an evolutionary approach

Rockville, Maryland, USA

Received 1 April 1999; accepted 4 June 1999.

Abstract 

The degree to which seasonal changes affect mood, energy, sleep, appetite, food preference, or the wish to socialize with other people has been called seasonality. Seasonal affective disorder (SAD), a condition where depressions in fall and winter alternate with non-depressed periods in spring and summer, is the most marked form of seasonality. Several lines of evidence suggest that genetic factors play an important role in the etiology of seasonality and SAD. Millions of years of evolution and adaptation have optimized human biochemical and physiological systems for function and survival under equatorial environmental conditions. Modern humans began their migration out of Africa only about 150 000 years ago. Little change in our ‘equatorial’ systems might have been expected over this relatively short evolutionary time-span. The author suggests that a genetic susceptibility to seasonal changes in mood and behavior is a genetic predisposition to an insufficient adaptation to temperate and high latitudes.

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PII: S0306-9877(99)90932-5

doi:10.1054/mehy.1999.0932

Medical Hypotheses
Volume 54, Issue 5 , Pages 704-707, May 2000