A lifelong habit of trimming just a
few calories from the daily diet can do
more than slim the waistline — a new
study shows it may help lessen the
effects of aging.
Scientists from the University of
Florida’s Institute on Aging have found
that eating a little less food and
exercising a little more over a lifespan
can reduce or even reverse aging-related
cell and organ damage in rats.
The discovery, described this month
in the journal Antioxidants and Redox
Signaling, builds on recent research in
animals and humans that has shown a more
drastic 20 percent to 40 percent cut in
calories slows aging damage. The UF
findings indicate even small reductions
in calories could have big effects on
health and shed light on the molecular
process responsible for the phenomenon,
which until now has been poorly
understood.
“This finding suggests that even
slight moderation in intake of calories
and a moderate exercise program is
beneficial to a key organ such as the
liver, which shows significant signs of
dysfunction in the aging process,” said
Christiaan Leeuwenburgh, an associate
professor of aging and geriatric
research at the UF College of Medicine
and the paper’s senior author.
UF scientists found that feeding rats
just 8 percent fewer calories a day and
moderately increasing the animals’
activity extended their average lifespan
and significantly overturned the
negative effects of cellular aging on
liver function and overall health.
An 8 percent reduction is the
equivalent of a few hundred calories in
an average human diet and moderate
exercise is equivalent to taking a short
walk.
To reveal the workings of the body’s
chemical climate when aging-related
damage happens, UF researchers tracked
levels of biomarkers — chemicals and
molecules present in the liver — in
groups of rats. The liver, a crucial
organ for maintaining good health during
aging, cleans the blood and helps
regulate the body’s immune system. The
researchers also plan to assess the same
biomarkers in a study of rats’ hearts,
muscle and brains.
The research team was surprised to
find one of the biomarkers, RNA, which
is important for coding DNA and for
protein synthesis, is more quickly
damaged by aging than the more
frequently studied DNA. RNA damage,
therefore, could be an excellent early
signal to indicate the onset of aging,
researchers say.
“Because it is more sensitive to
oxidative stress, RNA can be useful as
an early marker of oxidative damage and
even aging,” said Arnold Y. Seo, a
doctoral student in UF’s Institute on
Aging.
Seo authored the report along with
Tim Hofer, an Institute on Aging
research associate.
“To avoid disease, we can increase
our defense and look for aging
biomarkers and then test interventions,”
Hofer said. “It is better to protect
what is there to improve the quality of
life than to have to resort to invasive
procedures.”
In the study, which followed the rats
over their lifespan, one group of
animals ate as much food as they wanted
and did not exercise, another group of
animals exercised lightly and were fed
slightly less than they would have eaten
if allowed to have their fill. Liver
samples from these groups were compared
with samples taken from young rats.
The old sedentary rats that ate until
they were full had increased levels of
harmful oxidizing and inflammatory
molecules in the liver that were
associated with cell damage caused by
aging. Meanwhile, aging rats that
exercised and consumed a
calorie-restricted diet, had the reverse
outcome — they showed a decrease in
these molecules in the liver.
Leeuwenburgh said the study results
support the theory that cell death and
aging-related organ damage are caused by
unstable molecules known as free
radicals and by cellular oxidation and
inflammation.
“In a calorie-restricted environment,
you reduce the inflammatory response and
prevent cell death,” Leeuwenburgh said.
John O. Holloszy, a professor of
medicine in the division of geriatrics
and nutritional sciences at Washington
University School of Medicine in St.
Louis, said the study is of major
importance because it shows a mild
degree of caloric restriction — just
enough to prevent weight gain with
advancing age — can have beneficial
effects against aging. From a scientific
perspective, he added, it is important
to learn that RNA is a very good marker
of aging damage.
“I’d never really thought about RNA
before,” Holloszy said. “Research has
always looked at DNA. Because RNA is the
template for the information on the
genes on the DNA, RNA damage is a major
problem because it results in mutations
in the transcription of proteins.”
Source: University of Florida