AI Article Synopsis

  • Diet impacts lifelong health, with a lower protein to carbohydrate ratio linked to improved lifespan.
  • High protein diets affect lifespan indirectly by reallocating dietary sterols towards reproduction rather than longevity.
  • Supplementing high protein diets with cholesterol can restore shorter lifespans, revealing that nutrient interactions may influence life history in ways not solely dependent on the macronutrients themselves.

Article Abstract

Diet plays a significant role in maintaining lifelong health. In particular, lowering the dietary protein: carbohydrate ratio can improve lifespan. This has been interpreted as a direct effect of these macronutrients on physiology. Using , we show that the role of protein and carbohydrate on lifespan is indirect, acting by altering the partitioning of limiting amounts of dietary sterols between reproduction and lifespan. Shorter lifespans in flies fed on high protein: carbohydrate diets can be rescued by supplementing their food with cholesterol. Not only does this fundamentally alter the way we interpret the mechanisms of lifespan extension by dietary restriction, these data highlight the important principle that life histories can be affected by nutrient-dependent trade-offs that are indirect and independent of the nutrients (often macronutrients) that are the focus of study. This brings us closer to understanding the mechanistic basis of dietary restriction.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7837700PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.62335DOI Listing

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