Accelerated biological aging six decades after prenatal famine exposure.
Mengling ChengDalton ConleyTom KuipersChihua LiCalen Patrick RyanM Jazmin TaeubertShuang WangTian WangJiayi ZhouLauren L SchmitzElmar W TobiBas HeijmansL H LumeyDaniel W BelskyPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2024)
To test the hypothesis that early-life adversity accelerates the pace of biological aging, we analyzed data from the Dutch Hunger Winter Families Study (DHWFS, N = 951). DHWFS is a natural-experiment birth-cohort study of survivors of in-utero exposure to famine conditions caused by the German occupation of the Western Netherlands in Winter 1944 to 1945, matched controls, and their siblings. We conducted DNA methylation analysis of blood samples collected when the survivors were aged 58 to quantify biological aging using the DunedinPACE, GrimAge, and PhenoAge epigenetic clocks. Famine survivors had faster DunedinPACE, as compared with controls. This effect was strongest among women. Results were similar for GrimAge, although effect-sizes were smaller. We observed no differences in PhenoAge between survivors and controls. Famine effects were not accounted for by blood-cell composition and were similar for individuals exposed early and later in gestation. Findings suggest in-utero undernutrition may accelerate biological aging in later life.