• Contact
  • Home 1
  • Home 2
  • Home 3
  • Home 4
  • Newsletter
  • NutritionHome
  • Privacy Policy
  • Sample Page
  • Terms and Conditions
Sunday, November 9, 2025
  • Login
  • Register
No Result
View All Result
NEWSLETTER
Nutrition@GCI
  • Home
  • Food
  • Nutrition
  • Malnutrition
  • CMAM
  • MIYCN
  • Home
  • Food
  • Nutrition
  • Malnutrition
  • CMAM
  • MIYCN
No Result
View All Result
Nutrition@GCI
No Result
View All Result
Home Nutrition Diet & Nutrition

It’s not just genes — parents can pass down longevity another way

by Howard Hughes Medical Institute
October 7, 2025
in Diet & Nutrition, Malnutrition
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
0
It’s not just genes — parents can pass down longevity another way
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter



  • New research in the roundworm C. elegans shows how changes in the parent’s lysosomes that promote longevity are transferred to its offspring.
  • The work describes a new link between lysosomes — cellular organelles once thought to be the cell’s recycling center — and the epigenome — a set of chemical marks that modify gene expression. The study also details a new way that epigenetic information is transmitted from cells in the body to reproductive cells, allowing changes to be inherited without affecting the genetic code.
  • These insights show how epigenetic modifications that help organisms cope with environmental stress can be conferred from parents to their offspring.

In the Wang Lab, it’s not unusual for worms to live for a long time.

HHMI Janelia Research Campus Senior Group Leader Meng Wang and her team study longevity. They’ve shown that by overexpressing an enzyme in the lysosomes of the roundworm C. elegans, they can extend the worm’s life by up to 60 percent.

But surprisingly, the team found the worms’ progeny without this genetic modification were still living longer than normal. When they crossed their long-lived worms with “wild-type” worms that weren’t overexpressing the enzyme — a routine lab procedure used to wipe clean any genetic manipulations — they saw that the offspring also lived longer than normal worms. Somehow, the longevity markers were being transferred from generation to generation, even four generations later.

In new research, Wang and her team uncover how changes in the worm’s lysosomes that promote longevity are transferred from cells in its body to its reproductive cells through histones — proteins that play a key role in organizing and regulating DNA. In reproductive cells, these histone messengers cause modifications in the worm’s epigenome — a collection of chemical tags that regulate gene expression — enabling the lysosomal changes to be passed from generation to generation without changing the underlying DNA.

The findings have repercussions well beyond longevity. Epigenetic modifications can help organisms cope with many different types of environmental stressors — from diet changes to pollutant exposure to psychological stress — and the new work shows how these advantages could be conferred from parents to their offspring.

“You always think that your inheritance is in the nucleus, within the cell, but now we show that the histone can go from one place to another place, and if that histone carries any modification, that means you are going to transfer the epigenetic information from one cell to another,” Wang says. “It really provides a mechanism for understanding the transgenerational effect.”

Uncovering inheritance

The researchers found that one type of histone modification — a type of epigenetic change — was elevated in long-lived worms compared to those with normal lifespans. They wanted to see how this modification related to lysosomal changes that promote longevity.

Using a combination of genetic tools, transcriptomics, and imaging, they found that changes in lysosomal metabolism affecting the worms’ longevity activate a series of processes inside the cell. These actions trigger an increase in a specific histone variant, which is transported from the worm’s somatic or body tissues to its germline or reproductive cells through proteins that deliver nutrients to developing eggs. In the germline, the histone is modified, allowing the information from the lysosome to enter the germline and be passed from parent to child.

The researchers show that this pathway is activated during fasting, which causes a change in lysosomal metabolism — providing a link from the physiological phenomenon to the changes in the germline.

The new work adds to a growing body of evidence that lysosomes, once thought to only act as the cell’s recycling centers, also function as a signaling hub to control different processes in the cell and now are shown to affect generations.

The new research also unveils a new mechanism for transporting information from somatic to germline cells through histones, which could help explain how other types of inherited information are passed from parent to offspring.

By providing a mechanism for understanding how environmental changes to somatic cells are passed through the germline, the new work could help researchers better understand transgenerational effects that have been previously observed, like the malnutrition of a parent affecting its offspring.

“We now show that the soma and the germline can be connected by the histone and can carry memorable genetic information for generations,” Wang says.




Source link

Tags: GenesLongevityParentspass
ShareTweet
Previous Post

Why ultra-processed foods aren’t the real villain behind overeating

Next Post

Specials | Oct 05, 2025 | 11 min read Rise Against Hunger India Conferred with Mahatma Award 2025

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Related Posts

COP30 reveals 2.5 tri/- boost for Africa’s smallholder farmers

November 9, 2025
1

Why the food we eat is eating us, what we can do about that

November 9, 2025
1

Born from hope, stuck in crisis: South Sudan close to civil war

November 8, 2025
0

Why do pregnancy, breastfeeding reduce risk of breast cancer? Latest science finds clues

November 8, 2025
0
Next Post

Specials | Oct 05, 2025 | 11 min read Rise Against Hunger India Conferred with Mahatma Award 2025

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended

Arctic carbon conveyor belt discovered — ScienceDaily

Top 10 climate science insights unveiled

2 years ago
1
Sliding Vane Air Motor Market Expected $3,677.7 Million by 2025 | FIAM, Atlas Copco, Globe Airmotors

Sliding Vane Air Motor Market Expected $3,677.7 Million by 2025 | FIAM, Atlas Copco, Globe Airmotors

2 years ago
4

Popular News

  • Be Healthy! It’s a Girl Thing: Food, Fitness, and Feeling Great | The Nutrition Source

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2005: Two Steps Forward, One Step Back | The Nutrition Source

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Obesity Controversy | The Nutrition Source

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Eat, Drink, and Be Healthy | The Nutrition Source

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Vitamin D, Calcium and Health | The Nutrition Source

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Tag Cloud

Africa (246) aid (406) Breastfeeding (313) change (306) chief (244) child (218) Children (643) climate (478) Crisis (513) diet (227) dietary (196) disease (215) Eats (203) famine (204) Food (1663) Gaza (585) global (393) Health (612) healthy (242) humanitarian (258) Hunger (490) Kath (202) malnutrition (393) million (230) News (285) Nutrition (1127) obesity (256) People (286) report (205) risk (381) ScienceDaily (1398) scientists (196) security (374) Source (198) South (206) study (565) Sudan (342) support (261) Ukraine (270) UNICEF (330) War (237) warns (209) WFP (365) women (304) World (489)

Nutrition Research

Ecological System Theory (EST) and Community Participation to Promote Healthy Food Environments for Obesity and Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) Prevention among School-age Children
Research

Associations between sugar-sweetened beverages before and during pregnancy and offspring overweight/obesity in Japanese women: the TMM BirThree Cohort Study

October 13, 2023
14
Ecological System Theory (EST) and Community Participation to Promote Healthy Food Environments for Obesity and Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) Prevention among School-age Children
Research

Operationalising Multi-sectoral Food- and Nutrition-related Policies to curb the Rise in Obesity In Ghana

October 7, 2023
9
Ecological System Theory (EST) and Community Participation to Promote Healthy Food Environments for Obesity and Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) Prevention among School-age Children
Research

Ecological System Theory (EST) and Community Participation to Promote Healthy Food Environments for Obesity and Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) Prevention among School-age Children

October 4, 2023
17

Newsletter

Subscribe to our daily or weakly newsletter to get informed of all the important Nutrition news from around the globe.

Category

  • Agriculture
  • CMAM
  • crop
  • Diet & Nutrition
  • Food
  • Food Insecurity
  • Malnutrition
  • MIYCN
  • Nutrition
  • Obesity
  • Research
  • Stunting
  • Uncategorized
  • Wasting
No Result
View All Result

Archives

About Us

Nutrition @ GCIni brings you the latest news from around the globe. Check ut our categories page for different sections or go through the tags cloud for various tags within the news.

  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact

© 2020 - 2030 Nutrition@GCIni - Nutrition News from arround the globe by GCIni.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Lifestyle

© 2020 - 2030 Nutrition@GCIni - Nutrition News from arround the globe by GCIni.