| Literature DB >> 32498275 |
Alessandra Bolotta1,2, Giuseppe Filardo3, Provvidenza Maria Abruzzo1,2, Annalisa Astolfi4,5, Paola De Sanctis1, Alessandro Di Martino6, Christian Hofer7, Valentina Indio4, Helmut Kern7, Stefan Löfler7, Maurilio Marcacci8, Sandra Zampieri9,10, Marina Marini1,2, Cinzia Zucchini1.
Abstract
Physical exercise is deemed the most efficient way of counteracting the age-related decline of skeletal muscle. Here we report a transcriptional study by next-generation sequencing of vastus lateralis biopsies from elderly with a life-long high-level training practice (n = 9) and from age-matched sedentary subjects (n = 5). Unsupervised mixture distribution analysis was able to correctly categorize trained and untrained subjects, whereas it failed to discriminate between individuals who underwent a prevalent endurance (n = 5) or a prevalent resistance (n = 4) training, thus showing that the training mode was not relevant for sarcopenia prevention. KEGG analysis of transcripts showed that physical exercise affected a high number of metabolic and signaling pathways, in particular those related to energy handling and mitochondrial biogenesis, where AMPK and AKT-mTOR signaling pathways are both active and balance each other, concurring to the establishment of an insulin-sensitive phenotype and to the maintenance of a functional muscle mass. Other pathways affected by exercise training increased the efficiency of the proteostatic mechanisms, consolidated the cytoskeletal organization, lowered the inflammation level, and contrasted cellular senescence. This study on extraordinary individuals who trained at high level for at least thirty years suggests that aging processes and exercise training travel the same paths in the opposite direction.Entities:
Keywords: aging; endurance and resistance training; exercise; gene expression; sarcopenia; skeletal muscle
Year: 2020 PMID: 32498275 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21113988
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923