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Muscle loss in elderly linked to blood
vessels' failure to dilate
Post-meal blood vessel expansion naturally
occurs in young, not old, and restoration
through drug therapy could dramatically
improve strength and health of elders
GALVESTON, TX, May, 2010— Why do people
become physically weaker as they age? And is
there any way to slow, stop, or even reverse
this process, breaking the link between
increasing age and frailty?
In a paper published online this Wednesday
in the Journal
of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism,
University of Texas Medical Branch at
Galveston researchers present evidence that
answers to both those questions can be found
in the way the network of blood vessels that
threads through muscles responds to the
hormone insulin.
Normally, these tiny tubes are closed, but
when a young person eats a meal and insulin
is released into the bloodstream, they open
wide to allow nutrients to reach muscle
cells. In elderly people, however, insulin
has no such "vasodilating" effect.
"We were unsure as to whether decreased
vasodilation was just one of the side
effects of aging or was one of the main
causes of the reduction in muscle protein
synthesis in elderly people, because when
nutrients and insulin get into muscle
fibers, they also turn on lots of
intracellular signals linked to muscle
growth," said UTMB's Dr. Elena Volpi, senior
author of the paper.
"This research really demonstrates that
vasodilation is a necessary mechanism for
insulin to stimulate muscle protein
synthesis."
Volpi and her collaborators reached this
conclusion after an experiment in which they
infused an amount of insulin equivalent to
that generated by the body in response to a
single meal into the thigh muscles of two
sets of young volunteers.
One group had been given a drug that blocked
vasodilation, while the other was allowed to
respond normally.
Measurements of muscle protein synthesis
levels where made using chemical tracers,
while biopsies yielded data on specific
biochemical pathways linked to muscle
growth.
"We found that by blocking vasodilation, we
reproduced in young people the entire
response that we see in older persons — a
blunting of muscle protein response and a
lack of net muscle growth. In other words,
from a muscle standpoint, we made young
people look 50 years older," Volpi said.
Such results point the way to what could be
a powerful new therapy for age-related
frailty and the health and quality-of-life
problems that come with it.
"Eventually, if we can improve muscle growth
in response to feeding in old people by
improving blood flow, then we're going to
have a major tool to reduce muscle loss with
aging, which by itself is associated with
reduction in physical functioning and
increased risk of disability," Volpi said.
###
Other authors of the paper ("Insulin
Stimulates Human Skeletal Muscle Protein
Synthesis via an Indirect Mechanism
Involving Endothelial-Dependent Vasodilation
and Mammalian Target of Rapamycin Complex 1
Signaling") were lead author and
postdoctoral fellow Kyle Timmerman, medical
student Jessica Lee, assistant professor
Hans Dreyer, research scientist Shaheen
Dhanani, graduate students Erin Glynn and
Christopher Fry, assistant professor Micah
Drummond, associate professor Melinda
Sheffield Moore, and professor Blake
Rasmussen. Specialized metabolic studies
were conducted by the staff of the UTMB
Clinical Research Center, part of the
university's Institute for Translational
Sciences. The National Institute on Aging,
the UTMB Claude D. Pepper Center Older
Americans Independence Center, the National
Institute of Child Health and Human
Development and the UTMB Clinical
Translational Sciences Award supported this
study.
ABOUT UTMB: Established in 1891, Texas'
first academic health center comprises four
health sciences schools, three institutes
for advanced study, a research enterprise
that includes one of only two national
laboratories dedicated to the safe study of
infectious threats to human health, and a
health system offering a full range of
primary and specialized medical services
throughout Galveston County and the Texas
Gulf Coast region. UTMB is a component of
the University of Texas System.
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