David Sinclair· PhD
Smoking and obesity accelerate DNAme changes, and healthy diets slow them.
The evidence is convergent. Multiple independent sources reach the same conclusion, the underlying mechanism is well-characterized, and even the field's most cautious voices treat it as worth doing.
Smoking and obesity accelerate DNAme changes, and healthy diets slow them.
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Native comments, Twitter mentions, and Reddit threads about this claim — surfaced together so the conversation isn't fragmented across platforms.
Bookmarking — the dossier-vs-overview split is the right call. Most of the time I want overview; sometimes I want receipts.
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there's lots of data that show that people of comparable age but different health status for example smokers versus non-smokers people who exercise versus people who don't people who are obese versus people who are not can have very different methylation patterns
people of comparable age but different health status for example smokers versus versus non-smokers people who exercise versus people who don't people who are obese versus people who are not can have very different methylation patterns