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MicroAge: Microgravity as a model for accelerated skeletal muscle ageing

机译:微原理:微匍匐作为加速骨骼肌老化的模型

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Major demographic changes are affecting modern societies, leading to rapidly increasing numbers of older people with relatively poor health and quality of life. Physical frailty is a major factor affecting the ability of individuals to maintain independence and is primarily due to age-related loss of skeletal muscle mass and function. The mechanisms underlying age-related loss of muscle have not been fully evaluated, but we have demonstrated that muscle from ageing animals and humans show attenuated adaptations to exercise that compromises their ability to maintain muscle mass and function. We have evaluated key mechanisms underlying adaptations of skeletal muscle to exercise and demonstrated that the exercising muscle of young or adult animals and humans generates reactive oxygen species (ROS) that stimulate activation of specific transcription factors leading to increased generation of several protective and cytoprotective proteins. Such responses do not occur in muscle from older animals and man in response to exercise. Astronauts and animals exposed to microgravity also lose skeletal muscle mass and their muscles are also relatively unresponsive to aerobic or resistance training in microgravity. Within a call of the UK Space Agency for national payloads on board the International Space Station (ISS), we have proposed to assess the potential failure of muscle adaptations to contractile activity occurring in muscle fibers exposed to microgravity. The proposal was first selected in a shortlist of 14 proposals and then was successful as one of the three winning projects to be implemented on the ISS. The programme is sponsored by the UK Space Agency both directly and through the European Space Agency's European Exploration Envelop Programme, directed by the Institute of Ageing and Chronic Disease of the University of Liverpool and implemented in cooperation with the European Space Agency for the mission integration and operations. The payload developer is Kayser Spac
机译:主要人口变化正在影响现代社会,从而迅速增加了较困难的健康和生活质量的老年人。物理体力是影响个人维持独立能力的主要因素,主要是由于骨骼肌质量和功能的年龄相关丧失。相关年龄相关的肌肉损失的机制尚未得到充分评估,但我们已经证明,老化动物和人类的肌肉表明,损伤的适应锻炼,这损害了它们保持肌肉质量和功能的能力。我们已经评估了骨骼肌的适应性的关键机制,并证明了年轻或成年动物和人类的运动肌肉产生反应性氧物种(ROS),刺激特定转录因子的激活,导致几种保护和细胞保护蛋白产生的产生。这些反应不会发生在较旧的动物和男人的肌肉中,以应对运动。暴露于微匍匐的宇航员和动物也丢失了骨骼肌肿块,并且它们的肌肉对微匍匐的有氧或抗性训练也相对不反应。在国际空间站(ISS)上的英国国家有效载机的呼吁中,我们建议评估肌肉适应的潜在失败,以在暴露于微疱疹的肌纤维中发生的收缩活动。该提案首先在14个提案中选择的候选名单,然后作为在ISS上实施的三个获胜项目之一。该计划由英国空间机构直接和通过欧洲航天局的欧洲勘探包围计划,由利物浦大学老龄化和慢性病,并与欧洲航天局进行的使命融合和操作。有效载荷开发人员是Kayser Spac

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