Genetics shapes the immune system, especially innate immunity, but twin studies found ~77% of immune variation is driven by non-genetic factors. Learn how much you can support your own immunity.
Why do some people catch every cold while others rarely get sick? Part of the answer is in our genes — but not all of it. Here's how much genetics shapes our immune system, and what we can still control.
The body defends against pathogens with two cooperating systems. Innate immunity responds immediately and non-specifically (e.g., NK cells, macrophages), while adaptive immunity is slower but remembers pathogens (T and B cells). The latter relies on the HLA gene family to "present" foreign material.
Research shows that variation in some immune cells has a clear genetic component — particularly innate immune cells and naive T cells, which show relatively high heritability. This helps explain why susceptibility to some immune disorders runs in families.
A study of 210 twins measuring 204 immune parameters found that about 77% of those parameters are dominated by non-heritable factors — past infections, diet, the body's microbes, and environment. And the older we get, the more environmental influence accumulates. That's good news: it means we really do have the power to support our own immunity.
Good sleep, gene-appropriate nutrition, exercise, and stress management all affect immunity. Understanding your own genetics — for example through genetic risk and a DNA test — helps you plan health care more precisely.
The immune system is one of the clearest lessons that "genes are the baseline, but lifestyle is what we rewrite every day." We aren't defined by genetics alone — and that's a power that's in our own hands.
1. Is immunity entirely determined by genes?
It plays an important part — genes affect immune strength — but research finds non-genetic factors like environment and lifestyle matter even more.
2. Does changing lifestyle really help immunity?
Yes. Research shows lifestyle — sleep, diet, exercise, and stress management — strongly affects immunity.
3. Can a DNA test reveal my immunity?
Partly. Genetic testing can flag certain risk tendencies (including HLA links to autoimmune disease), but interpret it with a doctor.