Ectopic lipid accumulation and reduced glucose tolerance in elderly adults are accompanied by altered skeletal muscle mitochondrial activity

老年人体内异位脂质蓄积和糖耐量降低伴随骨骼肌线粒体活性的改变

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作者:Darcy L Johannsen, Kevin E Conley, Sudip Bajpeyi, Mark Punyanitya, Dympna Gallagher, Zhengyu Zhang, Jeffrey Covington, Steven R Smith, Eric Ravussin

Conclusions

Elderly adults show evidence of altered mitochondrial activity along with increased adiposity, oxidative stress, and reduced glucose tolerance, independent of obesity. We propose that mild uncoupling may be induced secondary to age-associated oxidative stress as a mechanism to dissipate the proton-motive force and protect against further reactive oxygen species production and damage.

Objective

Our objective was to measure mitochondrial capacity and coupling of the vastus lateralis muscle in elderly and young adults using novel in vivo approaches and relate mitochondrial activity to metabolic characteristics. Design: This was a cross-sectional study. Participants and intervention: Fourteen sedentary young (seven males and seven females, 20-34 yr of age) and 15 sedentary elderly (seven males and eight females, 70-84 yr of age) nonobese subjects selected for similar body weight underwent measures of body composition by magnetic resonance imaging and dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry, oral glucose tolerance, and in vivo mitochondrial activity by (31)P magnetic resonance and optical spectroscopy. Muscle biopsy was carried out in the same muscle to measure mitochondrial content, antioxidant activity, fiber type, and markers of mitochondrial biogenesis.

Results

Elderly volunteers had reduced mitochondrial capacity (P = 0.05) and a trend for decreased coupling efficiency (P = 0.08) despite similar mitochondrial content and fiber type distribution. This was accompanied by greater whole-body oxidative stress (P = 0.007), less skeletal muscle mass (P < 0.001), more adipose tissue in all depots (P ≤ 0.002) except intramyocellular (P = 0.72), and lower glucose tolerance (P = 0.07). Conclusions: Elderly adults show evidence of altered mitochondrial activity along with increased adiposity, oxidative stress, and reduced glucose tolerance, independent of obesity. We propose that mild uncoupling may be induced secondary to age-associated oxidative stress as a mechanism to dissipate the proton-motive force and protect against further reactive oxygen species production and damage.

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