Strength Training
Strength training may reverse muscle aging
Genetic tests shows it reverses aging process in elderly tissues
05.31.2007
It's
well known that resistance exercises improve muscle strength and
function in young and old alike, but the new research suggests that
strength training also affects older muscles on the level of gene
expression - essentially turning back the clock on muscle aging.
The
study, published in the online journal PLoS One, looked at whether
strength training affects the "gene expression profile" in older
adults' muscle. Genes hold the instructions from which the body
manufactures proteins; gene expression refers to the processes that
translate these instructions into proteins.
Analyzing small
samples of muscle tissue from a group of healthy young and older
adults, researchers found that older and younger muscle tissues
differed significantly in their gene expression profiles. The
difference indicated that older muscle tissue had impaired functioning
in mitochondria -- structures within cells that act as the cell's
"powerhouse."
That impairment was reversible, however. After 14
of the older adults underwent 6 months of strength training, the gene
expression profile in their muscles showed a more youthful appearance.
"In
a very real sense, the muscle was younger," said lead study author Dr.
Simon Melov of the Buck Institute for Age Research in Novato,
California.
Experts have long known that exercise is good for
younger and older adults alike, Melov told Reuters Health, but the new
findings suggest that it can "actually rejuvenate muscle" in older
individuals.
The study included 25 healthy men and women older
than 65, and 26 healthy adults ages 20 to 35 who had diet and exercise
habits similar to the older group. By analyzing muscle tissue from each
volunteer, Melov's team found age-related differences in the expression
of hundreds of genes - such that mitochondrial function in older
adults appeared "dramatically impaired."
Fourteen of the older adults then went through a strength training program, working out two days a week for 6 months.
As
expected, the researchers found that these volunteers boosted their
muscle strength, coming closer to their younger counterparts'
performance. But their muscle also showed a turnaround in gene
expression that Melov described as surprisingly stark.
He said
more studies are needed to see whether aerobic exercise, like walking
or cycling, has similar effects on muscle - and whether exercise might
reverse molecular aging in other types of body tissue.
For now, the researchers say, their findings show that it's never too late to start exercising.
Written by Amy Norton
Originally published by PLoS One and Reuters Health

