In healthy middle-aged men and women, what is the effect of dietary energy restriction and energy surplus on daily muscle protein synthesis rates and muscle morphology, compared to energy balance, during free-living and immobilisation?
Background Age related muscle tissue loss, which is associated with a number of negative health outcomes is partially caused by blunted muscle protein synthesis rates (MPS) in response to food ingestion, which is exacerbated by muscle disuse. Concomitantly, consuming an energy balanced diet appears to become more challenging with advancing age, due to a reduction in appetite. Of concern is that the impact of energy intake on muscle protein metabolism during ageing is poorly characterised. Objective To determine daily MPS and muscle morphology in response to differing energy intakes, in free-living conditions and during immobilisation. Methods Healthy middle-aged volunteers will consume a hypocaloric, energy-balanced, or hypercaloric diet (providing 1.4 g.kg.day protein) over a three-day free-living period, and a three day period of single leg immobilisation. Deuterium oxide and MRI scans will be used to measure daily MPS and muscle size, respectively. Value The study will determine the effect of energy intake per se on daily muscle protein synthesis rates and muscle size, in free-living and immobilised conditions. This will inform how energy provision modulates tissue loss with ageing, and how this interacts with the catabolic stress of muscle disuse.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
36
Varying conditions of energy intake, thereby manipulating whether participants are in a state of energy restriction, balance, or surplus.
Sport & Health Sciences University of Exeter
Exeter, Devon, United Kingdom
University of Exeter, Sports & Health Sciences, College of Life & Environmental Sciences
Exeter, Devon, United Kingdom
Muscle protein synthesis (MPS)
Daily muscle protein synthesis rates, expressed as fractional synthetic rate (FSR) (%/day)
Time frame: 6 days (3 days free-living, 3 days immobilised)
Muscle morphology.
Changes in muscle size, measured via MRI scanning, during immobilisation.
Time frame: 3 day immobilisation phase.
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