Submitted by ha_ha_ha_ha_hah t3_yo6whr in askscience
I don’t mean gaining immunity to diseases. I’m more interested in knowing about evolutionary changes that can pass through our genes or changes in the physical structure of organs, tissues, cells, etc.
provocative_bear t1_ivd2av8 wrote
You better believe it! The textbook case for this is the "sickle cell" trait. This is the gene that causes sickle cell anemia, a horrible genetic disease where your red blood cells are all jacked up and you mostly die a slow painful death. So why is this gene still hanging around humans' genomes if it kills people? If you are merely a carrier of the gene or have "sickle cell trait", it provides substantial protection against death from malaria (and the symptoms are much milder than full-blown sickle cell anemia).
It makes your red blood cells far more resistant to being infected by the disease-causing agent, the plasmodiaThe crossed-out text was somewhat recently debunked, it looks like the plasmodia either struggles to survive in the mutant red blood cells, or the infected red blood cell is more efficiently removed from the body before it bursts with a payload of new plasmodia.