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Nanoindentation was performed on individual grains of a polycrystalline Mg sample with c-axis declination angles ranging from parallel (0°) to perpendicular (90°) to the c-axis. Hardness was highest at ∼0°, decreased up to ∼55°, and then increased at ∼90° to an intermediate level. At ∼0°, high-density 〈c + a〉 dislocations extended deep into the crystal, contributing to high hardness. At ∼55°, 〈c + a〉 dislocations were confined near the indent, and occasional extension twinning reoriented the crystal to ∼45°, promoting 〈a〉 slip in both matrix and twin, leading to low hardness. At ∼90°, extension twinning reoriented the crystal to ∼0°, inducing texture hardening and intermediate hardness. Despite the complex stress state in nanoindentation, which fundamentally differs from the uniaxial stress in bulk tensile and compression tests, the combined contributions of dislocation and twinning still give rise to measurable hardness anisotropy, suggesting nanoindentation as a high-throughput technique for probing orientation-dependent mechanical behavior in Mg.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available October 1, 2026
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Age and early life adversity (ELA) are both key determinants of health, but whether they target similar physiological mechanisms across the body is unknown due to limited multi-tissue datasets from well-characterized cohorts. We generated DNA methylation (DNAm) profiles across 14 tissues in 237 semi-free ranging rhesus macaques, with records of naturally occurring ELA. We show that age-associated DNAm variation is predominantly tissue-dependent, yet tissue-specific epigenetic clocks reveal that the pace of epigenetic aging is relatively consistent within individuals. ELA effects on loci are adversity-dependent, but a given ELA has a coordinated impact across tissues. Finally, ELA targeted many of the same loci as age, but the direction of these effects varied, indicating that ELA does not uniformly contribute to accelerated age in the epigenome. ELA thus imprints a coordinated, tissue-spanning epigenetic signature that is both distinct from and intertwined with age-related change, advancing our understanding of how early environments sculpt the molecular foundations of aging and disease.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available July 18, 2026
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