Multiple treatments could slow age-related muscle wasting

By Published On: April 22, 2022
Multiple treatments could slow age-related muscle wasting

Everyone wants to stay fit and healthy as they grow old. But as people age, their body degrades, muscles shrink and strength declines.

Some older people suffer from excessive muscle loss, a condition known as sarcopenia. But University of Basel researchers have now shown that a combination therapy could delay its onset.

“Age-related muscle decline already occurs in our thirties but begins to accelerate at around 60. By age 80, we have lost about a third of our muscle mass,” said Dr Daniel Ham, one of the lead authors of the study now published in ‘Nature Communications‘.

“Although this ageing process cannot be stopped, it is possible to slow it down or counteract it, for example through exercise.”

Researchers led by Professor Markus Rüegg at the Biozentrum of the University of Basel have demonstrated in mice that both calorie restriction and the drug rapamycin have a positive effect on ageing skeletal muscle.

“If we can understand what happens in the muscle as we age, perhaps we can design treatments to counteract muscle aging and prevent sarcopenia.”

“Both calorie restriction and rapamycin have been proposed as anti-aging interventions, but we didn’t expect the two treatments to provide additive benefits,” explained Dr Nitish Mittal, another lead author of the study.

Previously, it was thought that moderate fasting and rapamycin represent different means of achieving the same goal, namely suppression of the protein complex mTORC1, which accelerates aging when overactive.

Beneficial effects

“Contrary to our expectations, the treatments do not redundantly converge at mTORC1,” emphasised Ham.

“While we could understand that calorie restriction would have beneficial effects beyond mTORC1 suppression, it was incredibly surprising to us that rapamycin, an mTORC1 inhibitor, further slowed muscle aging in calorie restricted mice, where mTORC1-activating nutrients are available for just a few hours each day.”

In calorie-restricted mice treated with rapamycin, the beneficial effects were therefore additive, with mice displaying significantly better muscle function than mice receiving either treatment alone.

“Compared to their peers, treated mice are more active and physically capable because their muscles remain healthy,” says Ham.

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