At the logical level, the email is the natural key.
At the physical level, given you are using a relational database, the natural key doesn't fit well as the primary key. The reason is mainly the performance issues mentioned by others.
For that reason, the design can be adapted. The natural key becomes the alternate key (UNIQUE, NOT NULL), and you use a surrogate/artificial/technical key as the primary key, which can be an auto-increment in your case.
systempuntoout asked,
What if someone wants to change his email address? Are you going to change all the foreign keys too?
That's what cascading is for.
Another reason to use a numeric surrogate key as the primary key is related to how the indexing works in your platform. In MySQL's InnoDB, for example, all indexes in a table have the primary key pre-pended to them, so you want the PK to be as small as possible (for speed's and size's sakes). Also related to this, InnoDB is faster when the primary key is stored in sequence, and a string would not help there.
Another thing to take into consideration when using a string as an alternate key, is that using a hash of the actual string that you want might be faster, skipping things like upper and lower cases of some letters. (I actually landed here while looking for a reference to confirm what I just said; still looking...)