“The Crosslinking Theory of Aging—Added Evidence”, John Bjorksten, Heikki Tenhu1990 (; similar)⁠:

The cross-linking theory of aging has been gaining acceptance at a steady pace, as evidenced by many independent rediscoveries. While several earlier studies were indicative, none seemed conclusive until it was shown, using Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC), that protein from young human brains could be made to closely resemble protein from old brains by exposing it to either of two entirely different cross-linking agents (glutaraldehyde and dipotassium diperoxy sulfate). This work has now been repeated with additional brain material, and a statistically-more-significant number of determinations. It is now shown that a treatment of brain protein with either one or two chemically totally different compounds which have no property in common except that both are cross-linkers, changes young brain protein so that it greatly resembles old, crosslinked protein. This shows that cross-linking reactions are involved in the age related changes in the studied proteins.

[Keywords: cross-linking, aging, differential scanning calorimetry]