Age-related loss of muscle mass and strength.
Goldspink. Geoffrey G
Key Findings
- Aging reduces the body’s own MGF levels, worsening muscle loss.
- Administering MGF activates satellite (stem) cells in muscle.
- Activated satellite cells promote muscle repair and hypertrophy, potentially counteracting age‑related decline.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the takeaway is that boosting MGF might help older adults preserve muscle mass and strength, but the abstract doesn’t provide dosing, safety, or protocol details. More research is needed before reliable self‑administration guidelines can be set.
Summary
The study says that as we get older, a natural protein called MGF (a form of IGF‑1) drops, which contributes to losing muscle and strength. Giving extra MGF can wake up muscle stem cells, helping repair and grow muscle tissue, which could improve strength and reduce frailty in seniors.
Abstract
Age-related muscle wasting and increased frailty are major socioeconomic as well as medical problems. In the quest to extend quality of life it is important to increase the strength of elderly people sufficiently so they can carry out everyday tasks and to prevent them falling and breaking bones that are brittle due to osteoporosis. Muscles generate the mechanical strain that contributes to the maintenance of other musculoskeletal tissues, and a vicious circle is established as muscle loss results in bone loss and weakening of tendons. Molecular and proteomic approaches now provide strategies for preventing age-related muscle wasting. Here, attention is paid to the role of the GH/IGF-1 axis and the special role of the IGFI-Ec (mechano growth factor/MGF) which is derived from the IGF-I gene by alternative splicing. During aging MGF levels decline but when administered MGF activates the muscle satellite (stem) cells that "kick start" local muscle repair and induces hypertrophy.
Study Information
pubmed
2012
2012-03-08T00:00:00.000Z
10.1155/2012/158279
62
58