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2004
Nutrition, Metabolism,
and Exercise Laboratory, Donald W. Reynolds
Center on Aging, Slot 806, University of
Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock,
AR 72205, USA.
Aging is associated with
remarkable changes in body composition.
Loss of skeletal muscle, a process called
sarcopenia, is a prominent feature of these
changes. In addition, gains in total body
fat and visceral fat content continue into
late life. The cause of sarcopenia is likely
a result of a number of changes that also
occur with aging. These include reduced
levels of physical activity, changing endocrine
function (reduced testosterone, growth hormone,
and estrogen levels), insulin resistance,
and increased dietary protein needs. Healthy
free-living elderly men and women have been
shown to accommodate to the Recommended
Dietary Allowance (RDA) for protein of 0.8
g . kg(-1) . d(-1) with a continued decrease
in urinary nitrogen excretion and reduced
muscle mass. While many elderly people consume
adequate amounts of protein, many older
people have a reduced appetite and consume
less than the protein RDA, likely resulting
in an accelerated rate of sarcopenia. One
important strategy that counters sarcopenia
is strength conditioning. Strength conditioning
will result in an increase in muscle size
and this increase in size is largely the
result of increased contractile proteins.
The mechanisms by which the mechanical events
stimulate an increase in RNA synthesis and
subsequent protein synthesis are not well
understood. Lifting weight requires that
a muscle shorten as it produces force (concentric
contraction). Lowering the weight, on the
other hand, forces the muscle to lengthen
as it produces force (eccentric contraction).
These lengthening muscle contractions have
been shown to produce ultrastructural damage
(microscopic tears in contractile proteins
muscle cells) that may stimulate increased
muscle protein turnover. This muscle damage
produces a cascade of metabolic events which
is similar to an acute phase response and
includes complement activation, mobilization
of neutrophils, increased circulating an
skeletal muscle interleukin-1, macrophage
accumulation in muscle, and an increase
in muscle protein synthesis and degradation.
While endurance exercise increases the oxidation
of essential amino acids and increases the
requirement for dietary protein, resistance
exercise results in a decrease in nitrogen
excretion, lowering dietary protein needs.
This increased efficiency of protein use
may be important for wasting diseases such
as HIV infection and cancer and particularly
in elderly people suffering from sarcopenia.
Research has indicated that increased dietary
protein intake (up to 1.6 g protein . kg(-1)
. d(-1)) may enhance the hypertrophic response
to resistance exercise. It has also been
demonstrated that in very old men and women
the use of a protein-calorie supplement
was associated with greater strength and
muscle mass gains than did the use of placebo.
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1998
Physiological Chemistry
I, Biocenter, Wurzburg, Federal Republic
of Germany.
Non-enzymatic glycation
of proteins with reducing sugars and subsequent
transition metal catalysed oxidations leads
to the formation of protein bound "advanced
glycation endproducts" (AGEs). They
accumulate on long-lived proteins and are
for example structural components of the
beta-amyloid plaques in Alzheimer's disease.
Since the oxidation of glycated proteins
as well as the interaction of AGEs with
cell surface receptors produces superoxide
radicals, it was tested in BHK 21 hamster
fibroblast cells and SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma
cells if AGEs can exert cytotoxic effects
on cells. Cell viability was assessed with
three independent tests: MTT-assay (activity
of the mitochondrial respiratory chain),
lactate dehydrogenase assay (release of
cytoplasmatic enzymes, membrane integrity)
and Neutral Red assay (active uptake of
a hydrophilic dye). Two model AGEs, chicken
egg albumin-AGE and BSA-AGE, both caused
significant cell death in a dose-dependent
manner. The cytotoxic effects of AGEs could
be attenuated by alpha-ketoglutarate and
pyruvate, by antioxidants such as thioctic
acid and N-acetylcysteine, and by aminoguanidine,
an inhibitor of nitric oxide synthase. This
suggests that reactive oxygen species as
well as reactive nitrogen species contribute
to AGE mediated cytotoxicity. Since AGEs
accumulate on beta-amyloid plaques in AD
over time, they may additionally contribute
to oxidative stress, cell damage, functional
loss and even neuronal cell death in the
Alzheimer's disease brain.
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