journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24472348/role-of-peroxisome-proliferator-activated-receptor-gamma-coactivator-1-alpha-pgc-1%C3%AE-in-denervation-induced-atrophy-in-aged-muscle-facts-and-hypotheses
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gilles Gouspillou, Martin Picard, Richard Godin, Yan Burelle, Russell T Hepple
Aging-related loss of muscle mass, a biological process named sarcopenia, contributes to mobility impairment, falls, and physical frailty, resulting in an impaired quality of life in older people. In view of the aging of our society, understanding the underlying mechanisms of sarcopenia is a major health-care imperative. Evidence obtained from human and rodent studies demonstrates that skeletal muscle denervation/reinnervation cycles occur with aging, and that progressive failure of myofiber reinnervation is a major cause of the accelerating phase of sarcopenia in advanced age...
2013: Longevity & Healthspan
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24472326/correction-lifespan-extension-and-delay-of-age-related-functional-decline-caused-by-rhodiola-rosea-depends-on-dietary-macronutrient-balance
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dmytro V Gospodaryov, Ihor S Yurkevych, Oleh V Lushchak, Volodymyr I Lushchak
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2013: Longevity & Healthspan
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24472304/lifelong-endurance-training-attenuates-age-related-genotoxic-stress-in-human-skeletal-muscle
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
James N Cobley, George K Sakellariou, Scott Murray, Sarah Waldron, Warren Gregson, Jatin G Burniston, James P Morton, Lesley A Iwanejko, Graeme L Close
BACKGROUND: The aim of the present study was to determine the influence of age and habitual activity level, at rest and following a single bout of high-intensity exercise, on the levels of three proteins poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1), cleaved-PARP-1 and poly(ADP-ribose) glycohydrolase (PARG), involved in the DNA repair and cell death responses to stress and genotoxic insults. Muscle biopsies were obtained from the vastus lateralis of young trained (22 ± 3 years, n = 6), young untrained (24 ± 4 years, n = 6), old trained (64 ± 3 years, n = 6) and old untrained (65 ± 6 years, n = 6) healthy males before, immediately after and three days following a high-intensity interval exercise bout...
2013: Longevity & Healthspan
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24472284/high-saturated-fat-and-low-carbohydrate-diet-decreases-lifespan-independent-of-body-weight-in-mice
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexandre Pastoris Muller, Marcelo de Oliveira Dietrich, Adriano Martimbianco de Assis, Diogo Onofre Souza, Luis Valmor Portela
BACKGROUND: Obesity is a health problem that is reaching epidemic proportions worldwide. We investigated the effects of a life-long high saturated fat and low carbohydrate (HF) diet on the body mass, glucose tolerance, cognitive performance and lifespan of mice. FINDINGS: C57BL/6J mice were fed with a HF diet (60% kcal/fat) or control diets (15% kcal/fat) for 27 months. One-half of the mice on the HF diet developed obesity (diet-induced obese (DIO) mice), whereas the remaining mice were diet resistant (DR)...
2013: Longevity & Healthspan
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24472117/the-sft-1-and-oxa-1-respiratory-chain-complex-assembly-factors-influence-lifespan-by-distinct-mechanisms-in-c-elegans
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sara Maxwell, Joanne Harding, Charles Brabin, Peter J Appleford, Ruth Brown, Carol Delaney, Garry Brown, Alison Woollard
BACKGROUND: C. elegans mitochondrial (Mit) mutants have disrupted mitochondrial electron transport chain function, yet, surprisingly, they are often long-lived, a property that has offered unique insights into the molecular mechanisms of aging. In this study, we examine the phenotypic consequences of reducing the expression of the respiratory chain complex assembly factors sft-1 (homologous to human SURF1) and oxa-1 (homologous to human OXA1) by RNA interference (RNAi). Mutations in human SURF1 are associated with Leigh syndrome, a neurodegenerative condition of the brain caused by cytochrome oxidase (COX) deficiency...
2013: Longevity & Healthspan
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25599705/workshop-report-can-an-understanding-of-the-mechanisms-underlying-age-related-loss-of-muscle-mass-and-function-guide-exercise-and-other-intervention-strategies
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Malcolm J Jackson, Anne McArdle, Aphrodite Vasilaki, Anna Kayani
An international workshop was hosted by the University of Liverpool on 15-16 July 2011 to address at a basic level what is known about the fundamental mechanisms by which skeletal muscle mass and function are lost during aging and to examine the nature of interventions that might prevent these mechanistic changes. Of particular importance was to attempt to evaluate how different forms of exercise (or muscle contractile activity) influence these processes and how these effects can be best optimized to prevent or delay age-related loss of muscle function...
2012: Longevity & Healthspan
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24764514/caffeine-extends-life-span-improves-healthspan-and-delays-age-associated-pathology-in-caenorhabditis-elegans
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
George L Sutphin, Emma Bishop, Melana E Yanos, Richard M Moller, Matt Kaeberlein
BACKGROUND: The longevity of an organism is influenced by both genetic and environmental factors. With respect to genetic factors, a significant effort is being made to identify pharmacological agents that extend life span by targeting pathways with a defined role in the aging process. On the environmental side, the molecular mechanisms responsible for the positive influence of interventions such as dietary restriction are being explored. The environment experienced by humans in modern societies already contains countless compounds that may influence longevity...
2012: Longevity & Healthspan
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24764513/immunosenescence-inflammation-and-alzheimer-s-disease
#28
REVIEW
Adriana Martorana, Matteo Bulati, Silvio Buffa, Mariavaleria Pellicanò, Calogero Caruso, Giuseppina Candore, Giuseppina Colonna-Romano
Ageing impacts negatively on the development of the immune system and its ability to fight pathogens. Progressive changes in the T-cell and B-cell systems over the lifespan of individuals have a major impact on the capacity to respond to immune challenges. The cumulative age-associated changes in immune competence are termed immunosenescence that is characterized by changes where adaptive immunity deteriorates, while innate immunity is largely conserved or even upregulated with age. On the other hand, ageing is also characterized by "inflamm-ageing", a term coined to explain the inflammation commonly present in many age-associated diseases...
2012: Longevity & Healthspan
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24764512/oxidative-stress-in-the-etiology-of-age-associated-decline-in-glucose-metabolism
#29
REVIEW
Adam B Salmon
One of the most common pathologies in aging humans is the development of glucose metabolism dysfunction. The high incidence of metabolic dysfunction, in particular type 2 diabetes mellitus, is a significant health and economic burden on the aging population. However, the mechanisms that regulate this age-related physiological decline, and thus potential preventative treatments, remain elusive. Even after accounting for age-related changes in adiposity, lean mass, blood lipids, etc., aging is an independent factor for reduced glucose tolerance and increased insulin resistance...
2012: Longevity & Healthspan
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24764511/aging-immunosenescence-and-membrane-rafts-the-lipid-connection
#30
REVIEW
Tamas Fulop, Aurélie Le Page, Hugo Garneau, Naheed Azimi, Sarra Baehl, Gilles Dupuis, Graham Pawelec, Anis Larbi
The decreased efficiency of immune responses in older people is partly a consequence of alterations in T lymphocyte functions caused by modifications in the early events of signal transduction. Several alterations in the signaling pathways of T lymphocytes have been described in older humans and animals. A unifying cause could be modifications in the physicochemical properties of the plasma membrane resulting from changes in its lipid composition and the distribution and function of lipid rafts (LR). The latter serve to assemble the initial components of the signaling cascade...
2012: Longevity & Healthspan
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24764510/thioredoxin-oxidative-stress-cancer-and-aging
#31
REVIEW
Lisa C Flores, Melanie Ortiz, Sara Dube, Gene B Hubbard, Shuko Lee, Adam Salmon, Yiqiang Zhang, Yuji Ikeno
The Free Radical or Oxidative Stress Theory of Aging is one of the most popular theories in aging research and has been extensively studied over the past several decades. However, recent evidence using transgenic/knockout mice that overexpress or down-regulate antioxidant enzymes challenge the veracity of this theory since the animals show no increase or decrease in lifespan. These results seriously call into question the role of oxidative damage/stress in the aging process in mammals. Therefore, the theory requires significant modifications if we are to understand the relationship between aging and the regulation of oxidative stress...
2012: Longevity & Healthspan
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24764509/male-mice-retain-a-metabolic-memory-of-improved-glucose-tolerance-induced-during-adult-onset-short-term-dietary-restriction
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kerry M Cameron, Satomi Miwa, Cornelia Walker, Thomas von Zglinicki
BACKGROUND: Chronic dietary restriction (DR) has been shown to have beneficial effects on glucose homeostasis and insulin sensitivity. These factors show rapid and robust improvements when rodents were crossed over from an ad libitum (AL) diet to DR in mid life. We aimed to determine whether the beneficial effects induced by short-term exposure to DR can be retained as a 'metabolic memory' when AL feeding is resumed (AL-DR-AL) and vice versa: whether the effects of long-term DR can be reversed by a period of AL feeding (DR-AL-DR)...
2012: Longevity & Healthspan
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24764508/evidence-of-a-metabolic-memory-to-early-life-dietary-restriction-in-male-c57bl-6-mice
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Colin Selman, Sarah Hempenstall
BACKGROUND: Dietary restriction (DR) extends lifespan and induces beneficial metabolic effects in many animals. What is far less clear is whether animals retain a metabolic memory to previous DR exposure, that is, can early-life DR preserve beneficial metabolic effects later in life even after the resumption of ad libitum (AL) feeding. We examined a range of metabolic parameters (body mass, body composition (lean and fat mass), glucose tolerance, fed blood glucose, fasting plasma insulin and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1), insulin sensitivity) in male C57BL/6 mice dietary switched from DR to AL (DR-AL) at 11 months of age (mid life)...
2012: Longevity & Healthspan
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24764507/translating-longevity-research-into-healthspan
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gordon J Lithgow, Janet M Lord, James L Kirkland
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2012: Longevity & Healthspan
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24472232/from-cellular-senescence-to-age-associated-diseases-the-mirna-connection
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elisabeth Schraml, Johannes Grillari
Cellular senescence has evolved from an in-vitro model system to study aging in vitro to a multifaceted phenomenon of in-vivo importance as senescent cells in vivo have been identified and their removal delays the onset of age-associated diseases in a mouse model system. From the large emerging class of non-coding RNAs, miRNAs have only recently been functionally implied in the regulatory networks that are modified during the aging process. Here we summarize examples of similarities between the differential expression of miRNAs during senescence and age-associated diseases and suggest that these similarities might emphasize the importance of senescence for the pathogenesis of age-associated diseases...
2012: Longevity & Healthspan
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