Early life changes in histone landscape protect against age-associated amyloid toxicities through HSF-1-dependent regulation of lipid metabolism.
2024Nature aging
Oleson BJ, Bhattrai J, Zalubas SL, Kravchenko TR, Ji Y +7 more
Plain English
Researchers exposed young worms to mild stress during development, which triggered changes in how their cells read their genes. These early-life changes activated a protein called HSF-1 that rewired the worms' fat metabolism and protected their cells from damage caused by amyloid proteins—the toxic clumps linked to Alzheimer's disease—when they got older.
This matters because it shows that brief stressful experiences early in life can create lasting protection against age-related diseases by fundamentally changing how the body processes fats and manages cellular damage.