New discovery may help stop age-related muscle atrophy
January 5th, 2010 - 5:08 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )Washington, Jan 5 (ANI): Scientists in the U.S. have made a significant discovery about the cause of age-related muscle atrophy that could lead to new drugs to halt this natural process.
They have found that free radicals, such as reactive oxygen species, damage mitochondria in muscle cells, leading to cell death and muscle atrophy.
“Age-related muscle atrophy in skeletal muscle is inevitable. However, we know it can be slowed down or delayed,” said Holly Van Remmen, co-author of the study, from the Sam and Ann Barshop Institute for Longevity and Aging Studies at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio.
“Our goal is to increase our understanding of the basic mechanisms underlying sarcopenia to gain insight that will help us to discover therapeutic interventions to slow or limit this process,” Van Remmen added.
To make this discovery, researchers used mice that were genetically manipulated to prevent them from having a protective antioxidant (CuZnSOD).
As a result of not being able to produce this antioxidant, the mice had very high levels of free radicals (reactive oxygen species) and lost muscle mass and function at a much faster rate than normal mice.
Additionally, the muscles of the genetically modified mice were much smaller and weaker than those of normal mice. Scientists believe that these findings mimic effects of the normal aging process in humans, but at an accelerated rate.
The study is available online in the FASEB Journal. (ANI)
- Can reversal of ageing help save our muscles? - Feb 13, 2010
- New study sheds light on muscle loss - Feb 13, 2010
- New discovery brings anti-ageing pill a step closer - Nov 20, 2010
- Defective mitochondria slow aging in mice - Jul 23, 2009
- Tweaking gene turns tissues into super muscles - Nov 22, 2011
- Key mechanism of childhood respiratory disease identified - Mar 08, 2011
- Antioxidants lead to fertility problems in females - Jan 19, 2011
- Aging-related protein holds breast cancer clues - Jan 28, 2011
- How eating less can make you live longer - Nov 19, 2010
- Air pollutants lead to age-related muscle decline - Sep 23, 2009
- Cells must get rid of 'garbage' to keep up muscle strength - Dec 02, 2009
- Cells get rid of garbage to keep muscles strong - Dec 02, 2009
- How hormonal and molecular responses to exercise differ by age - Jan 26, 2011
- Vitamin E prevents muscle wasting, repairs cells - Dec 21, 2011
- Ultraviolet light 'helps skin cancer cells survive, proliferate' - Dec 08, 2010
Tags: barshop institute, cell death, faseb journal, free radicals, health science center, mitochondria, muscle atrophy, muscle cells, new discovery, new drugs, oxygen species, remmen, sarcopenia, skeletal muscle, texas health science, texas health science center, texas health science center at san antonio, therapeutic interventions, university of texas health science center, university of texas health science center at san