Evolution’s Twist: USC Study Finds Meat-tolerant Genes Offset High Cholesterol And Disease

When our human ancestors started eating meat, evolution served up a healthy bonus – the development of genes that offset high cholesterol and chronic diseases associated with a meat-rich diet, according to a new USC study. Those ancestors also started living longer than ever before – an unexpected evolutionary twist. The research by USC professors Caleb Finch and Craig Stanford appears in Wednesday’s Quarterly Review of Biology.