研讨会报告:了解与年龄有关的肌肉质量和功能丧失的内在机制,能否为运动和其他干预策略提供指导?

Longevity & healthspan Pub Date : 2012-10-01 eCollection Date: 2012-01-01 DOI:10.1186/2046-2395-1-5
Malcolm J Jackson, Anne McArdle, Aphrodite Vasilaki, Anna Kayani
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引用次数: 0

摘要

利物浦大学于 2011 年 7 月 15-16 日主办了一次国际研讨会,旨在从基础层面探讨骨骼肌质量和功能在衰老过程中丧失的基本机制,并研究可能防止这些机制变化的干预措施的性质。尤为重要的是,尝试评估不同形式的运动(或肌肉收缩活动)如何影响这些过程,以及如何优化这些影响,以防止或延缓与年龄相关的肌肉功能丧失。研讨会为期两天,包括一系列特邀演讲和分组讨论,旨在找出当前知识的主要差距和未来可能的研究问题。本次研讨会的目的有两个方面:1.确定目前对导致骨骼肌质量和功能随年龄增长而丧失的机制的最新认识,并从机制层面探讨运动和/或其他干预措施如何以及在多大程度上可以预防这些变化。2.2. 确定信息稀缺但有可能产生数据的特定研究领域,这些数据将对未来控制老年人与年龄相关的肌肉质量和功能损失的战略产生影响。详细讨论的领域包括功能性运动单位的丧失、肌肉干细胞活性降低、肌肉对运动和营养的转录反应发生与年龄相关的变化、蛋白质平衡发生与年龄相关的变化、线粒体功能、肌肉与免疫细胞之间的交叉对话发生变化,以及如何将基础科学的发展转化为对与年龄相关的肌肉质量和功能丧失机制的理解。每场会议之后都确定了需要进一步研究的三个关键领域。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Workshop report: Can an understanding of the mechanisms underlying age-related loss of muscle mass and function guide exercise and other intervention strategies?

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. The program took the form of a two-day meeting, comprising a series of invited talks and breakout sessions designed to identify key gaps in current knowledge and potential future research questions. The aims of this Workshop were two-fold: 1. To identify the current state-of-the-art in the understanding of the mechanisms that contribute to loss of skeletal muscle mass and function that occurs with aging and to address at a mechanistic level how, and to what extent, exercise and/or other interventions might prevent these changes. 2. To identify specific areas of research where information is sparse but which are likely to yield data that will impact on future strategies to manipulate age-related loss of muscle mass and function in older people. The areas discussed in detail were loss of functional motor units, reduced muscle stem cell activity, age-related changes in transcriptional responses of muscle to exercise and nutrition, age-related changes in protein homeostasis, mitochondrial function, altered cross-talk between muscle with immune cells and how the developments in basic science to understand mechanisms underlying age-related loss of muscle mass and function can be translated. Following each session three key areas where further studies are needed were identified.

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