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Exercise reverses aging in human skeletal
tissue
Newswise — Not only does
exercise make most people feel better and
perform physical tasks better, it now appears
that exercise – specifically, resistance
training -- actually rejuvenates muscle tissue
in healthy senior citizens.
A recent study, co-led by
Buck Institute faculty member Simon Melov, PhD,
and Mark Tarnopolsky, MD, PhD, of McMaster
University Medical Center in Hamilton, Ontario,
involved before and after analysis of gene
expression profiles in tissue samples taken from
25 healthy older men and women who underwent six
months of twice weekly resistance training,
compared to a similar analysis of tissue samples
taken from younger healthy men and women. The
results of the study appear in the May 23
edition of the on-line, open access journal
PLoS One.
The gene expression
profiles involved age-specific mitochondrial
function; mitochondria act as the “powerhouse”
of cells. Multiple studies have suggested that
mitochondrial dysfunction is involved in the
loss of muscle mass and functional impairment
commonly seen in older people. The study was the
first to examine the gene expression profile, or
the molecular “fingerprint”, of aging in healthy
disease-free humans. Results showed that in the
older adults, there was a decline in
mitochondrial function with age.
However, exercise resulted
in a remarkable reversal of the genetic
fingerprint back to levels similar to those seen
in the younger adults. The study also measured
muscle strength. Before exercise training, the
older adults were 59% weaker than the younger
adults, but after the training the strength of
the older adults improved by about 50%, such
that they were only 38% weaker than the young
adults.
“We were very surprised by
the results of the study,” said Melov. “We
expected to see gene expressions that stayed
fairly steady in the older adults. The fact that
their ‘genetic fingerprints’ so dramatically
reversed course gives credence to the value of
exercise, not only as a means of improving
health, but of reversing the aging process
itself, which is an additional incentive to
exercise as you get older.”
The study participants
were recruited at McMaster University. The
younger (20 to 35 with an average age of 26)
and older (older than 65 with an average age
of 70) adults were matched in terms of diet
and exercise; none of them took medication
or had diseases that can alter mitochondrial
function.
Tissue samples were taken
from the thigh muscle. The six month resistance
training was done on standard gym equipment. The
twice-weekly sessions ran an hour in length and
involved 30 contractions of each muscle group
involved, similar to training sessions available
at most fitness centers. The strength test was
based on knee flexion.
The older participants,
while generally active, had never participated
in formal weight training said co-first author
Tarnopolsky, who directs the Neuromuscular and
Neurometabolic Clinic at McMaster University. In
a four month follow up after the study was
complete, he said most of the older adults were
no longer doing formal exercise in a gym, but
most were doing resistance exercises at home,
lifting soup cans or using elastic bands.
“They were still as strong,
they still had the same muscle mass,” said
Tarnopolsky. “This shows that it’s never too
late to start exercising and that you don’t have
to spend your life pumping iron in a gym to reap
benefits.”
Future studies are being
designed to determine if resistance training has
any genetic impact on other types of human
tissue, such as those that comprise organs;
researchers also want to determine whether
endurance training (running, cycling) impacts
mitochondrial function and the aging process.
The most recent study also points to particular
gene expressions that could be used as starting
points for chemical screenings that could lead
to drug therapies that would modulate the aging
process.
“The vast majority of aging
studies are done in worms, fruit flies and mice;
this study was done in humans,” said Melov.
“It’s particularly rewarding to be able to
scientifically validate something practical that
people can do now to improve their health and
the quality of their lives, as well as knowing
that they are doing something which is actually
reversing aspects of the aging process.”
Joining Melov and
Tarnopolsky as co-authors of the paper are Alan
Hubbard and Krysta Felkey of the Buck Institute,
and Kenneth Beckman of the Children’s Hospital
of Oakland Research Institute. The work was
supported by the National Institutes of Health,
a Nathan Shock Award to the Buck Institute, a
Ellison Medical Foundation Senior Scholar award
to Simon Melov and a grant to Mark Tarnopolsky
from the Canadian Institute for Health Research.
The Buck Institute is an
independent non-profit organization dedicated to
extending the healthspan, the healthy years of
each individual’s life. The National Institute
of Aging designated the Buck a Nathan Shock
Center of Excellence in the Biology of Aging,
one of just five centers in the country. Buck
Institute scientists work in an innovative,
interdisciplinary setting to understand the
mechanisms of aging and to discover new ways of
detecting, preventing and treating age-related
diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s
disease, cancer, stroke, and arthritis.
Collaborative research at the Institute is
supported by genomics, proteomics and
bioinformatics technology. For more information:
http://www.buckinstitute.org