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Featured Research

Aerobic Exercise Overcomes Age-Related Insulin Resistance
Principal Investigator: Satoshi Fujita, Ph.D.

Androgen Therapy in Older Women
Principal Investigator: Melinda Sheffield-Moore, Ph.D.

Aerobic Exercise Overcomes Age-Related Insulin Resistance

Principal Investigator: Satoshi Fujita, Ph.D.

Age-dependent loss of skeletal muscle mass and strength diminishes quality of life of older individuals by impairing gait and increasing risks for falls. An important contributing factor is reduced response of skeletal muscle to anabolic hormones such as insulin. Physiological levels of insulin stimulate synthesis of skeletal muscle in young adults only if blood flow and amino acid availability are maintained. Insulin exerts a positive anabolic effect on muscle in part through its ability to dilate blood vessels and increase blood flow. With aging this ability of muscle to respond to insulin is compromised, thereby diminishing insulin-induced promotion of muscle protein synthesis. Aerobic exercise has been shown to increase dilation of blood vessels and improve blood flow to the muscle. The hypothesis of this study was that a bout of aerobic exercise before administration of insulin would improve blood flow to the muscle brought on by exercise in older individuals, and amplify the positive anabolic effect of insulin on muscle protein synthesis.

Thirteen healthy, older subjects (67-69 years of age, 10 men and 3 women) were randomly assigned to either an exercise group, which underwent 45 minutes of treadmill at 70% of the maximum heart rate, or a no-exercise group. Both groups were infused intravenously with insulin and blood and muscle biopsy samples were obtained for assessing muscle protein synthesis.

The results showed for the first time that a single bout of moderate aerobic exercise restores insulin responsive muscle protein synthesis in elderly individuals. The mechanism of this effect was shown to be from vasodilation, improvement of blood flow and amino acid availability, and enhanced activation of the Akt/mTOR signaling pathway, which is a pathway specifically involved in protein synthesis. Thus moderate-intensity aerobic exercise may be an effective intervention to counter age-related declines in muscle mass and function and frailty.

Publication:

1. Fujita S, Rasmussen BB, Cadenas JG P, U Drummond MJUPU, Glynn ELUPUUP, Sattler FR, and Volpi E. Aerobic exercise overcomes the age-related insulin resistance of muscle protein metabolism by improving endothelial function Uand Akt/mTOR signaling. Diabetes. 2007 56:1615-1622.
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Androgen Therapy in Older Women

Principal Investigator: Melinda Sheffield-Moore, Ph.D.

Aging can result in a progressive decline in skeletal muscle mass and function. Reasons for this loss may include inadequate nutrition, hormonal alterations, reduced mitochondrial protein synthesis, DNA alterations and physical inactivity, all leading to an imbalance between protein synthesis and breakdown. The decrease in muscle mass that characterizes the aging process in both men and women is accompanied by a progressive increase in fat tissue. As a result of the continued growth of our aging population, it has become increasingly important to understand the mechanisms underlying loss of muscle mass and function and devise interventions that can ameliorate this loss. Androgen administration has been shown to positively influence muscle protein synthesis in aging men, and has been used recently by clinicians to improve muscle strength and function. Anabolic hormones such as testosterone and oxandrolone improve lean body mass and strength in both young and older men. Testosterone has limited potential in women because of its virilizing effects. However, oxandrolone is purported to induce fewer androgenic side effects, and may be useful in both sexes. Numerous clinical trials have demonstrated its benefits in a multitude of patient populations, including those with burn injuries and AIDS. However, the potential benefits of oxandrolone administration have not previously been examined in older women.

To address this issue, five healthy women between the ages of 63 and 67 years and seven older men, as matching controls, were studied. Oxandrolone was administered orally at 7.5 and 10.5 mg doses twice daily for 15 days. Metabolic parameters were measured at baseline (day 0), day 5 and day 14 of oxandrolone administration. At these time points blood samples and muscle biopsies were taken to measure muscle protein synthesis.

The results indicate that muscle protein synthesis increased in both older women and men after 14 days of oxandrolone administration. However, the time course of protein anabolism differed in men and women, since the rate increased significantly in women only after 14 days, whereas protein synthesis increased significantly in men at day 5 and then declined somewhat by day 14. This decline is not unexpected since it is known that oxandrolone administration significantly decreases testosterone production by day 5 in older men. The results also indicated that the mechanism of increased muscle mass in both older women and men is through increase in protein synthesis rather than an inhibition of protein breakdown, since the rate of protein breakdown remained unchanged.

The ability of an anabolic agent to reverse the loss of lean body mass using an oral anabolic agent has considerable clinical implications. Given that most trauma and burn patients have acute muscle wasting and most cancer and AIDS patients show a chronic muscle wasting, such interventions may prove useful in restoring muscle mass in these patient populations.

Publication:

1. Sheffield-Moore M, Paddon-Jones D, Casperson SL, Gilkison C, Volpi E, Wolfe SE, Jiang J, Rosenblatt JI, Urban RJ. Androgen therapy induces muscle protein anabolism in older women. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2006 91(10): 3844-9
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