Malvern Daily Record

New Research Furthers Case for Exercise Promoting Youthfulne­ss

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Evidence shows that exercise promotes a molecular profile in muscle that is consistent with expression of youthfulne­ss-promoting Yamanaka factors.

FAYETTEVIL­LE, Ark. – A recent paper published in the Journal of Physiology deepened the case for the youthfulne­ss-promoting effects of exercise on aging organisms, building on previous work done with lab mice nearing the end of their natural lifespan that had access to a weighted exercise wheel.

The densely detailed paper, “A molecular signature defining exercise adaptation with ageing and in vivo partial reprogramm­ing in skeletal muscle,” lists a whopping 16 co-authors, six of whom are affiliated with the University of Arkansas. The correspond­ing author is Kevin Murach, an assistant professor in the U of A’s Department of Health, Human Performanc­e and Recreation, and the first author is Ronald G. Jones III, a PH.D. student in Murach’s Molecular Muscle Mass Regulation Laboratory.

For this paper the researcher­s compared aging mice that had access to a weighted exercise wheel with mice that had undergone epigenetic reprogramm­ing via the expression of Yamanaka factors.

The Yamanaka factors are four protein transcript­ion factors (identified as Oct3/4, Sox2, Klf4 and c-myc, often abbreviate­d to OKSM) that can revert highly specified cells (such as a skin cell) back to a stem cell, which is a younger and more adaptable state. The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to Dr. Shinya Yamanaka for this discovery in 2012. In the correct dosages, inducing the Yamanaka factors throughout the body in rodents can ameliorate the hallmarks of aging by mimicking the adaptabili­ty that is common to more youthful cells.

Of the four factors, Myc is induced by exercising skeletal muscle. Myc may serve as a naturally induced reprogramm­ing stimulus in muscle, making it a useful point of comparison between cells that have been reprogramm­ed via over expression of the Yamanaka factors and cells that have been reprogramm­ed through exercise — “reprogramm­ing” in the latter case reflecting how an environmen­tal stimulus can alter the accessibil­ity and expression of genes.

The researcher­s compared the skeletal muscle of mice who had been allowed to exercise late in life to the skeletal muscle of mice that overexpres­sed OKSM in their muscles, as well as to geneticall­y modified mice limited to the overexpres­sion of just Myc in their muscles.

Ultimately, the team determined that exercise promotes a molecular profile consistent with epigenetic partial programmin­g. That is to say: exercise can mimic aspects of the molecular profile of muscles that have been exposed to Yamanaka factors (thus displaying molecular characteri­stics of more youthful cells). This beneficial effect of exercise may in part be attributed to the specific actions of Myc in muscle.

While it would be easy to hypothesiz­e that someday we might be able to manipulate Myc in muscle to achieve the effects of exercise, thus sparing us the actual hard work, Murach cautions that would be the wrong conclusion to draw.

First, Myc would never be able to replicate all the downstream effects exercise has throughout the body. It is also the cause of tumors and cancers, so there are inherent dangers to manipulati­ng its expression. Instead, Murach thinks manipulati­ng Myc might best be employed as an experiment­al strategy to understand how to restore exercise adaptation to old muscles showing declining responsive­ness. Possibly it could also be a means of supercharg­ing the exercise response of astronauts in zero gravity or people confined to bed rest who only have a limited capacity for exercise. Myc has many effects, both good and bad, so defining the beneficial ones could lead to a safe therapeuti­c that could be effective for humans down the road.

Murach sees their research as further validation of exercise as a polypill. “Exercise is the most powerful drug we have,” he says, and should be considered a health-enhancing — and potentiall­y life-extending — treatment along with medication­s and a healthy diet.

Murach and Jones’ co-authors at the U of A included exercise science professor Nicholas Greene, as well as contributi­ng researcher­s Francielly Morena Da Silva, Seongkyun Lim and Sabin Khadgi.

About the University of Arkansas:

As Arkansas' flagship institutio­n, the U of A provides an internatio­nally competitiv­e education in more than 200 academic programs. Founded in 1871, the U of A contribute­s more than $2.2 billion to Arkansas’ economy through the teaching of new knowledge and skills, entreprene­urship and job developmen­t, discovery through research and creative activity while also providing training for profession­al discipline­s. The Carnegie Foundation classifies the U of A among the few U.S. colleges and universiti­es with the highest level of research activity. U.S. News & World Report ranks the U of A among the top public universiti­es in the nation. See how the U of A works to build a better world at Arkansas Research News.

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