high-protein diets are having a moment. in any grocery store you can now buy a protein bowl, pick up a protein box of eggs and nuts for lunch, or snack on a protein bar.
but there’s evidence that restricting which proteins you eat — particularly cutting back on meat — could be important for healthy aging. the surprising reason: it forces the tissues to make hydrogen sulphide (h2s), a gas that’s poisonous if inhaled and smells like rotten eggs, but promotes health inside the body.
as a physiology researcher, i have long been interested in the strange role of h2s in the body. this is not a gas anyone wants around. it stinks, is a component of flatulence, and its toxicity has been
linked to at least one mass extinction.
and yet, the body naturally produces small amounts of it as a signalling molecule to act as a chemical messenger. now, we are starting to understand the link between diet and h2s production.
diet restrictions that increase longevity
less can be more when it comes to food. when scientists have put organisms on carefully balanced but restricted diets, these organisms have substantially increased healthy lifespans.