The
toll that aging takes on a body extends all the way down to the
cellular level. But the damage accrued by cells in older muscles is
especially severe, because they do not regenerate easily and they become
weaker as their mitochondria, which produce energy, diminish in vigor
and number.
A study published this month in Cell Metabolism, however, suggests that certain sorts of workouts may undo some of what the years can do to our mitochondria.
Exercise
is good for people, as everyone knows. But scientists have surprisingly
little understanding of its cellular impacts and how those might vary
by activity and the age of the exerciser.
So
researchers at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., recently conducted
an experiment on the cells of 72 healthy but sedentary men and women who
were 30 or younger or older than 64. After baseline measures were
established for their aerobic fitness, their blood-sugar levels and the
gene activity and mitochondrial health in their muscle cells, the
volunteers were randomly assigned to a particular exercise regimen.
Some
of them did vigorous weight training several times a week; some did
brief interval training three times a week on stationary bicycles
(pedaling hard for four minutes, resting for three and then repeating
that sequence three more times); some rode stationary bikes at a
moderate pace for 30 minutes a few times a week and lifted weights
lightly on other days. A fourth group, the control, did not exercise.
After
12 weeks, the lab tests were repeated. In general, everyone experienced
improvements in fitness and an ability to regulate blood sugar.
There
were some unsurprising differences: The gains in muscle mass and
strength were greater for those who exercised only with weights, while
interval training had the strongest influence on endurance.
But
more unexpected results were found in the biopsied muscle cells. Among
the younger subjects who went through interval training, the activity
levels had changed in 274 genes, compared with 170 genes for those who
exercised more moderately and 74 for the weight lifters. Among the older
cohort, almost 400 genes were working differently now, compared with 33 for the weight lifters and only 19 for the moderate exercisers.
Many
of these affected genes, especially in the cells of the interval
trainers, are believed to influence the ability of mitochondria to
produce energy for muscle cells; the subjects who did the interval
workouts showed increases in the number and health of their mitochondria
— an impact that was particularly pronounced among the older cyclists.
It
seems as if the decline in the cellular health of muscles associated
with aging was “corrected” with exercise, especially if it was intense,
says Dr. Sreekumaran Nair, a professor of medicine and an
endocrinologist at the Mayo Clinic and the study’s senior author. In
fact, older people’s cells responded in some ways more robustly to
intense exercise than the cells of the young did — suggesting, he says,
that it is never too late to benefit from exercise. NY Times
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