Skeletal muscle homeostasis and plasticity in youth and ageing: impact of nutrition and exercise

被引:138
作者
Brook, M. S. [1 ]
Wilkinson, D. J. [1 ]
Phillips, B. E. [1 ]
Perez-Schindler, J. [2 ]
Philp, A. [2 ]
Smith, K. [1 ]
Atherton, P. J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Nottingham, Royal Derby Hosp Ctr, MRC ARUK Ctr Excellence Musculoskeletal Ageing Re, Derby DE22 3DT, England
[2] Univ Birmingham, Sch Sport Exercise & Rehabil Sci, MRC ARUK Ctr Excellence Musculoskeletal Ageing Re, Birmingham, W Midlands, England
基金
英国医学研究理事会; 英国生物技术与生命科学研究理事会;
关键词
ageing; muscle; protein turnover; substrate metabolism; MYOFIBRILLAR PROTEIN-SYNTHESIS; ESSENTIAL AMINO-ACIDS; CROSS-SECTIONAL AREA; SIGNALING MOLECULE PHOSPHORYLATION; FORCE PRODUCTION CHARACTERISTICS; RESISTANCE-TYPE EXERCISE; SATELLITE CELL RESPONSE; TRANSFER-RNA SYNTHETASE; MYOSIN HEAVY-CHAIN; LEAN BODY-MASS;
D O I
10.1111/apha.12532
中图分类号
Q4 [生理学];
学科分类号
071003 [生理学];
摘要
Skeletal muscles comprise a substantial portion of whole body mass and are integral for locomotion and metabolic health. Increasing age is associated with declines in both muscle mass and function (e.g. strength-related performance, power) with declines in muscle function quantitatively outweighing those in muscle volume. The mechanisms behind these declines are multi-faceted involving both intrinsic age-related metabolic dysregulation and environmental influences such as nutritional and physical activity. Ageing is associated with a degree of `anabolic resistance' to these key environmental inputs, which likely accelerates the intrinsic processes driving ageing. On this basis, strategies to sensitize and/or promote anabolic responses to nutrition and physical activity are likely to be imperative in alleviating the progression and trajectory of sarcopenia. Both resistance and aerobic-type exercises are likely to confer functional and health benefits in older age, and a clutch of research suggests that enhancement of anabolic responsiveness to exercise and/or nutrition may be achieved by optimizing modifications of muscle-loading paradigms ( workload, volume, blood flow restriction) or nutritional support (e.g. essential amino acid/leucine) patterns. Nonetheless, more work is needed in which a more holistic view in ageing studies is taken into account. This should include improved characterization of older study recruits, that is physical activity/nutritional behaviours, to limit confounding variables influencing whether findings are attributable to age, or other environmental influences. Nonetheless, on balance, ageing is associated with declines in muscle mass and function and a partially related decline in aerobic capacity. There is also good evidence that metabolic flexibility is impaired in older age.
引用
收藏
页码:15 / 41
页数:27
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