Current Aging Science
Volume 1, 3 Issues, 2008
ISSN: 1874-6098 (Print)
ISSN: 1874-6128 (Online)

Current Aging Science
Volume 1, Number 1, March 2008
Contents

Editorial: A New Journal with an
Integrated Approach in the Study of Aging and Longevity
Pp. 1-3
Debomoy K. Lahiri
Towards an Understanding of the Anti-Aging Mechanism
of Caloric Restriction Pp. 4-9
Gabriella Cavallini, Alessio Donati, Zina Gori and Ettore
Bergamini
[Abstract] [Full
Text Article]
The Mitochondrial Free Radical Theory of Aging: A
Critical View Pp. 10-21
Alberto Sanz and Rhoda K.A. Stefanatos
[Abstract] [Full
Text Article]
Stress, Aging and Reliability of Antioxidant Enzyme
Defense Pp. 22-29
Nadezhda D. Goncharova, Victor Yu. Marenin and Tatiana
N. Bogatyrenko
[Abstract] [Full
Text Article]
Inflammation in Neurodegenerative Disorders: Friend
or Foe? Pp. 30-41
Daniela Galimberti, Chiara Fenoglio and Elio Scarpini
[Abstract] [Full
Text Article]
Hypopituitarism in the Elderly: Multifaceted Clinical
and Biochemical Presentation Pp. 42-50
Luca Foppiani, Antonio Ruelle, Roberto Bandelloni, Paolo
Quilici and Patrizia Del Monte
[Abstract] [Full
Text Article]
Correlation Between ROS Production and InsP3
Released by Granulocytes from Type 1 Diabetic Patients in
a cAMP Dependent Manner Pp. 51-55
Míriam Martins Chaves , Daniela Caldeira Costa,
Denniece Adriana da Costa Souza, Francisco das Chagas Lima
e Silva and José Augusto Nogueira Machado
[Abstract] [Full
Text Article]
Tau as a Molecular Marker of Development, Aging and
Neurodegenerative Disorders Pp. 56-61
Félix Hernández, Mar Pérez, Elena
Gómez de Barreda, Paloma Goñi-Oliver and Jesús
Avila
[Abstract] [Full
Text Article]
High Velocity Power Training in Older Adults Pp.
62-67
Stephen P. Sayers
[Abstract] [Full
Text Article]
A Tai Chi Chuan Training Model to Improve Balance
Control in Older Adults Pp. 68-70
Strawberry Gatts
[Abstract] [Full
Text Article]
Abstracts

[Back to top]
Editorial: A New Journal with an Integrated Approach
in the Study of Aging and Longevity
Debomoy K. Lahiri
Fascinating biological questions cluster around the phenomenon
of development and aging. Does every species age in the same
way as the human? Is there a fundamental process of “aging”
common to all organisms? How does aging occur in plants? How
does the aging process deviate from the ”normal”
to cause aging-related disorders in long-lived species? Can
one prevent and/or modify the aging process? How do environment
and genes play a part in this process? Can we learn something
from various human lifestyles, diets, cultures, environments
and even from other species in order to enhance healthy aging?
Indeed, the quest to maintain healthy, long life by mankind
has been going on from time immemorial. We are just beginning
to answer some of these questions from current research work.
The major characteristics of aging are the deteriorative changes
with time during postmaturational life and progressive inability
to withstand stresses, making the organism vulnerable to disease
and increasing the risk of death [1]. Various lines of research
are helping us to understand the mechanisms of aging. First,
the metabolically-based “Free radical damage theory”
may explain some aspects of aging [2]. Studies on the biology
of aging suggest that it results from normal processes that
living cells employ to “burn fuel” supplying life’s
most important necessity, energy. Paradoxically, this indirectly
results in much of the disease and disability that characterizes
aging in humans and other animals. Indeed, free oxygen radicals,
which are chemically unstable by-products of cellular oxidation,
can start and propagate the deterioration of cell membranes
and macro-molecules [2,3]. Such accumulation of small “hits”
causing cellular injury has far-reaching results ranging from
uncorrected mutations and cancers to Alzheimer's disease and
vascular pathology [3]. Alzheimer's disease, heart disease,
stroke and diabetes are now among the leading causes of aging-related
death in the United States [4], and they are increasing as
the median age of US residents increases. These diseases are
a major focus of current biomedical research, and their pathology
is related to the aging process in complex ways.
From the point of view of evolutionary biology, it is proposed
that increases in brain size and the human life span over
the past million years were happening along with changes in
nutritional priorities and slower developmental rates [5].
These changes were accompanied by resistance for inflammation
during the extreme prehistoric environments [5]. Findings
from a wide range of disciplines point toward reduced levels
of inflammation as a key factor in the recent increase in
human life-spans. From the dietary perspective, the inclusion
of more meat into the human diet supplied protein needed for
larger brains but involved new physiological and genetic trade-offs
between fitness and risk for long-term damage [6]. This scenario
provides an adequate rationale for why variants of some genes
for metabolizing animal fat (such as those of the ApoE gene
family), which are linked to a human predisposition for atherosclerosis,
some cancers, and the amyloid plaques of Alzheimer's disease,
are not shared by our closest primate relatives [6]. Similarly,
a diet too rich in animal fat may result in increasing exposure
to pathogenic microbes and exacerbating inflammation and may
accelerate aging. In the same topic of diet, current re-search
in calorie restriction is another important line of aging
research. Indeed, dietary restriction affects life-span and
spontaneous cancer incidence [7]. From the point of reproductive
physiology, the recent study of reproductive aging in female
birds is quite fruitful and birds serve as a good model to
study oxidative damage [8]. Regarding the role of hormones,
measurements of serum levels of a number of potential steroidal
and peptidic neuroendocrine aging markers have recently shed
some important light into the human male aging progression
[9].
Environment’s role is not static, as recent work suggests
that environmental factors, such as metals and dietary supplements,
can modulate gene expression early in life and that this may
manifest as an aging-related disorder many years later [10].
Indeed for such diseases, the second trigger is aging-dependent,
which could be oxidative stress or inflammatory factors [11].
Thus, along with proper nutrition, appropriate body mass index,
physical and mental exercise and healthy environment are important
for longevity by slowing down or preventing aging-related
disease mentioned above.
An increasing number of articles in the aging field are being
published in the biomedical literature. A simple search of
“Aging” in PubMed/Medline provides an awesome
8164 citations in just the last 12 months alone! Advances
in aging research are contributed by worldwide researchers
who cut across the disciplines. Importantly, for aging-related
disorders, research work that bridges the gap between basic
science discovery and translational studies is indispensable
to develop novel diagnostic, preventive and therapeutic strategies.
At this time it would be very useful for researchers and educators
to integrate different aspects of aging research for communicating
major research findings effectively to various scientists,
educators, health science professionals, and policy makers.
However, there are only a few journals devoted to the various
aspects of aging research. As the aging field is large and
dispersed in the literature, it is appropriate, therefore,
to launch a new journal focusing on topics of major importance
to the aging research field. Bentham Science Publishers, with
the help of a strong team of members of the Editorial Board,
is launching a new journal: Current Aging Science.
The journal will publish cutting-edge reviews and original
research papers on all aspects of age-related scientific research.
Undoubtedly, this new international journal will not only
advance the field but also effectively complement the existing
excellent journals related to the field.
How can we effectively monitor the progress of research and
what are the guidelines? What was said 125 years ago at the
inaugural issue of the journal Science [12] is true
again: “Science must be true to itself as well as in
accord with its surroundings. It must maintain ever the highest
tone and the most impartial accuracy. It must covet the scrutiny
of every eye, and must be generous ever in the acknowledgment
of its shortcomings. Higher than all, it must be devoted to
the truth. It must cheerfully undertake the severest labor
to secure it, and must deem no sacrifice too great in order
to preserve it. It must have an unlimited capacity for work,
and an unlimited enthusiasm in it, while at the same time
a proper reserve in affirming the results of it. While striving
itself for the highest attainable accuracy, it must be catholic
and liberal toward others. It must not magnify differences,
nor impute motives.”
Current Aging Science is still very much a “work
in progress”. In fact, the contents for the first issue
of Current Aging Science represent a perfect mixed
bag of both basic and applied sciences. Cavallini and colleagues
present (pp. 4-9) a timely review towards an understanding
of the antiaging mechanism of caloric restriction. This article
is followed by two complementary articles on different dimensions
of the hyperactive free radicals, collectively called reactive
oxygen species (ROS). While Sanz and Stefanatos critically
review (pp. 10-21) the mitochondrial free radical theory of
aging, Goncharova and coworkers nicely elaborate (pp. 22-29)
on the relationship of stress, aging and reliability of anti-oxidant
enzyme defense. Following up discussion from ROS to another
important area of research, Galimberti and colleagues well
tackle (pp. 30-41) the controversial aspect of inflammation
in neurodegenerative disorders. From mechanistic studies,
we then move to two disease-related articles. Foppiani and
collaborators present (pp. 42-50) a multifaceted clinical
and biochemical investigation on hypopituitarism in the elderly.
Chaves and colleagues elegantly describe (pp. 51-55) a correlation
study between ROS production and InsP3 released by granulocytes
from type 1 diabetic patients in a cAMP-dependent manner.
For tracking down the molecular events of aging and aging-related
disorders, Hernández and colleagues timely highlight
(pp. 56-61) how tau protein could serve as a molecular marker
of development, aging and neurodegenerative disorders. Two
articles deal with subjects beyond biological mechanism but
quite relevant in the context of older subjects. While Sayers
elo-quently updates (pp. 62-67) us on high velocity power
training in older adults, Gatts succinctly discusses (pp.
68-70) a Tai Chi training model that preserves or restores
balance, mobility, sensory attention, and motor skills in
older adults. This is just the beginning, and comments, advice
and suggestions from the readers would definitely improve
and broaden the scope of the journal.
Current Aging Science is a new vehicle run by aging-related
investigators worldwide across a wide range of disciplines.
The major aim of the journal is to publish frontier review
and experimental articles on all areas of research that may
influence longevity. This multidisciplinary journal will help
in understanding the biology and mechanism of aging, genetics,
pathogenesis, intervention of normal aging process and preventive
strategies of aging-related disorders. The journal publishes
objective reviews written by experts and leaders actively
engaged in research using cellular, clini-cal, molecular,
and animal models, including lower organism models (e.g.,
yeast, Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila).
In addition to the effect of aging on integrated systems,
the journal also will include original articles on recent
research in fast-emerging areas of adult stem cells, brain
imaging, calorie restriction, immunosenescence, molecular
diagnostics, pharmacology and clinical aspects of aging. We
are also planning to report advances in areas related to developmental
programming of aging and the synergistic mechanisms of aging
with cardiovascular diseases, obesity and neurodegenerative
disorders. We plan to discuss, debate, and challenge some
of the aforementioned topics in the pages of Current Aging
Science.
With great hope and optimism we undertake the great challenges
and opportunities to unravel the biology of aging and understand
the mechanism of aging-related disorders. With great humility
and honor I take the responsibility as editor-in-chief of
Current Aging Science. I sincerely appreciate the
excellent cooperation from the members of the Editorial Advisory
Board of the journal. I am grateful to Matthew Honan and colleagues
of Bentham Science Publishers for their support and advice.
I thank John Nurnberger, Jr. for his invaluable advice and
also acknowledge the support of Indiana University School
of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry and the members of my
laboratory of Molecular Neurogenetics. Personally, I am deeply
indebted to my late father, Benoy K. Lahiri, who enlightened
and guided me through the path of knowledge and ignited in
me the curiosity for knowing the unknowns. With continued
support from the general public and the scientific community,
and confidence that scientific progress will elucidate the
key for longevity, Current Aging Science embarks
upon a bright future. May this journal succeed by highlighting
and advancing the progress in aging-related research and by
changing and adapting to new challenges; at this moment, please
join me in helping it push forward.
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[2] Harman DJ. Aging: A theory based on free radical and radiation
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[5] Finch CE. The biology of human longevity: Inflammation,
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(Elsevier), Amsterdam, pp. 640 (2007).
[6] Holmes DJ. The fires of aging. Science 319: 1044-1045
(2008).
[7] Weindruch R and Walford RL. Dietary restriction in mice
beginning at 1 year of age: effect on life-span and spontaneous
cancer incidence. Science 215(4538): 1415-1418 (1982).
[8] Ogburn CE, Carlberg K, Ottinger MA, Holmes DJ, Martin
GM, Austad SN. Exceptional cellular resistance to oxidative
damage in long-lived birds requires active gene expression.
J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci 56(11): B468-74 (2001).
[9] Morley JE, Kaiser F, Raum WJ, Perry HM 3rd, Flood JF,
Jensen J, et al. Potentially predictive and manipulable
blood serum correlates of aging in the healthy human male:
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sulfate, and the ratio of insulin-like growth factor 1 to
growth hormone. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 94(14): 7537-7542 (1997).
[10] Lahiri DK and Maloney B. Genes are not our destiny: the
somatic epitype bridges between the genotype and the phenotype.
Nat Rev Neurosci 7:doi:10.1038/nrn2022-c1 (2006).
[11] Lahiri, DK, Maloney B, Basha MR, Ge Y-W and Zawia NH.
How and when environmental agents and dietary factors affects
the course of Alzheimer’s disease: the “LEARn”
model (Latent Early-Life Associated Regulation) may explain
the triggering of AD. Curr Alzheimers Res 4(2): 219-228 (2007).
[12] King M. Future of American science. Science 1(1): 1-3
(1883).
[Back to top]
Towards an Understanding of the Anti-Aging Mechanism
of Caloric Restriction
Gabriella Cavallini, Alessio Donati, Zina Gori and Ettore
Bergamini
[Full Text
Article]
Accumulation of oxidatively altered cell components may play
a role in the age-related cell deterioration and associated
diseases. Caloric restriction is the most robust anti-aging
intervention that extends lifespan and retards the appearance
of age-associated diseases. Autophagy is a highly conserved
cell-repair process in which the cytoplasm, including excess
or aberrant organelles, is sequestered into double-membrane
vesicles and delivered to the degradative vacuoles. Autophagy
has an essential role in adaptation to fasting and changing
environmental conditions. Several pieces of evidence show
that autophagy may be an essential part in the anti-aging
mechanism of caloric restriction: 1. The function of autophagy
declines with increasing age; 2. The temporal pattern of the
decline parallels the changes in biomarkers of membrane aging
and in amino acid and hormone signalling. 3. These age-dependent
changes in autophagy are prevented by calorie restriction.
4. The prevention of the changes in autophagy and biomarkers
of aging co-varies with the effects of calorie restriction
on life-span. 5. A long-lasting inhibition of autophagy accelerates
the process of aging. 6. A long-lasting stimulation of autophagy
retards the process of aging in rats. 7. Stimulation of autophagy
may rescue older cells from accumulation of altered mtDNA.
8. Stimulation of autophagy counteracts the age-related hypercholesterolemia
in rodents. It is suggested that the pharmacological intensification
of suppression of aging (P.I.S.A. treatment) by the stimulation
of autophagy might prove to be a big step towards retardation
of aging and prevention of age-associated diseases in humans.
[Back to top]
The Mitochondrial Free Radical Theory of Aging: A
Critical View
Alberto Sanz and Rhoda K.A. Stefanatos
[Full Text Article]
The Mitochondrial Free Radical Theory of Aging (MFRTA) proposes
that mitochondrial free radicals, produced as by-products
during normal metabolism, cause oxidative damage. According
to MFRTA, the accumulation of this oxidative damage is the
main driving force in the aging process. Although widely accepted,
this theory remains unproven, because the evidence supporting
it is largely correlative. For example, long-lived animals
produce fewer free radicals and have lower oxidative damage
levels in their tissues. However, this does not prove that
free radical generation determines life span. In fact, the
longest-living rodent -Heterocephalus glaber-
produces high levels of free radicals and has significant
oxidative damage levels in proteins, lipids and DNA.
At its most orthodox MFRTA proposes that these free radicals
damage mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and in turn provoke mutations
that alter mitochondrial function (e.g. ATP production). According
to this, oxidative damage to mtDNA negatively correlates with
maximum life span in mammals. However, in contrast to MFRTA
predictions, high levels of oxidative damage in mtDNA do not
decrease longevity in mice. Moreover, mice with alterations
in polymerase gamma (the mitochondrial DNA polymerase) accumulate
500 times higher levels of point mutations in mtDNA without
suffering from accelerated aging.
Dietary restriction (DR) is the only non-genetic treatment
that clearly increases mean and maximum life span. According
to MFRTA caloric restricted animals produce fewer mitochondrial
reactive oxygen species (mtROS). However, DR alters more than
free radical production (e.g. it decreases insulin signalling)
and therefore the increase in longevity cannot be exclusively
attributed to a decrease in mtROS generation. Thus, moderate
exercise produces similar changes in free radical production
and oxidative damage without increasing maximum life span.
In summary, available data concerning the role of free radicals
in longevity control are contradictory, and do not prove MFRTA.
In fact, the only way to test this theory is by specifically
decreasing mitochondrial free radical production without altering
other physiological parameters (e.g. insulin signalling).
If MFRTA is true animals producing fewer mtROS must have the
ability to live much longer than their experimental controls.
[Back to top]
Stress, Aging and Reliability of Antioxidant Enzyme
Defense
Nadezhda D. Goncharova, Victor Yu. Marenin and Tatiana
N. Bogatyrenko
[Full Text
Article]
Clinical and experimental data point to existence of disturbances
of adaptive ability of aged organism to extreme impacts. However
mechanisms of these disturbances are not clear yet.
The purpose of the investigation was to study age-related
changes in reaction of erythrocyte antioxidant enzyme system
in response to acute psycho-emotional stress and a possible
role of these changes in age-related alterations of oxygen
blood transport in nonhuman primates.
Ten young (6-8 years) and ten old (20-26 years) healthy female
rhesus monkeys were subjected to acute moderate psycho-emotional
stress (two hours squeeze cage restraint) at 1500h. Plasma
cortisol, lipid peroxidation products (TBARS) and activities
of superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione peroxidase, gluthatione
reductase (GR), and gluthatione-S-transferase in erythrocytes
were measured before stress and at 30, 60, 120, 240 min and
24 hours after beginning of the stress.
We have found for the first time that SOD activity decreased
in response to the stress in young monkeys while it increased
in the half of old monkeys. Young animals also demonstrated
essentially higher increase in GR activity and plasma cortisol
level in response to the restraint in comparison with old
monkeys. Level of TBARS did not practically change in response
to the stress in young animals and significantly increased
in old monkeys.
The study demonstrated that the age-related alterations in
SOD and GR stress responsiveness lead to activation of peroxide
oxidation of lipids that may be considered as an important
factor of aging damage of erythrocyte functioning and reliability
of oxygen transport to tissues under stress conditions.
[Back to top]
Inflammation in Neurodegenerative Disorders: Friend
or Foe?
Daniela Galimberti, Chiara Fenoglio and Elio Scarpini
[Full Text Article]
Inflammation plays a role in the development of Alzheimer’s
disease (AD). Several cytokines and chemokines have been detected
both immunohistochemically and in cerebrospinal fluid from
patients. Some of them, including Tumor Necrosis Factor-α,
Interferon-γ-inducible
Protein-10, Monocyte Chemotactic Protein-1 and Interleukin-8,
are increased in AD and in Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI),
considered the prodromal stage of AD, suggesting that these
modifications occur very early during the development of the
disease, possibly explaining the failure of trials with anti-inflammatory
agents in patients with severe AD. Further evidence suggests
that cytokines and chemokines could have a role in other neurodegenerative
disorders, such as Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration and Amyothrophic
Lateral Sclerosis. In this regard, analogies and differences
among these neurodegenerative disorders will be discussed.
Neurodegenerative disorders are considered multifactorial
diseases, and genetic factors influence pathological events
and contribute to change the disease phenotype from patient
to patient. Gene polymorphisms in crucial molecules, including
cytokines, chemokines and molecules related to oxidative stress,
may act as susceptibility factors, increasing the risk of
disease development, or may operate as regulatory factors,
modulating the severity of pathogenic processes or the response
to drug treatment. With these premises, genetic studies recently
carried out will be described and discussed in detail.
[Back to top]
Hypopituitarism in the Elderly: Multifaceted Clinical
and Biochemical Presentation
Luca Foppiani, Antonio Ruelle, Roberto Bandelloni, Paolo
Quilici and Patrizia Del Monte
[Full Text
Article]
Hypopituitarism (HYPO) is a rare and under-investigated pathology
in the elderly.
Aim: to review our case records of patients =65 yrs
with first diagnosis of anterior global hypopituitarism, in
order to evaluate presentation symptoms, etiology, biochemical
and hormonal pictures, pituitary morphology, and efficacy
of therapy.
Patients: 15 patients (65-82 yrs) were studied: in
11 (73%) HYPO was secondary to pituitary macroadenoma (non-secreting
in 10 and GH-secreting in 1); in 3 it was associated to empty
sella, and in 1 to pituitary hypoplasia.
Results: major presenting symptoms were visual-field
defects and asthenia (40%) but also memory and/or gait impairment
and nausea (30%) and depression (20%) were significantly observed.
Dyslipidemia (73%), anemia (20%) and severe hyponatremia (13%)
were found. After starting substitutive therapy and clinical
improvement, 10 patients with macroadenoma underwent uneventful
neurosurgery, which improved visual alterations but not pituitary
function. Immunohisto-chemistry showed positivity for FSH
in one patient and for GH in one patient. Six out of the eight
patients with a post-surgical tumor remnant required treatment
(surgery/radiotherapy/somatostatin analogue treatment in the
acromegalic patient).
Conclusions: The diagnosis of HYPO is often delayed
in the elderly, since symptoms may be ascribed to aging and
associated comorbidities. In our series, most of the aspecific
symptoms were retrospectively addressed to HYPO since their
resolution/improvement with replacement therapy. The prevalent
cause of HYPO remains non-functioning pituitary macroadenomas.
Hyponatremia can be a life-threatening presenting symptom.
Symptoms considered apparently aspecific in the elderly should
be investigated in order to possibly diagnose an important
treatable disorder as HYPO.
[Back to top]
Correlation Between ROS Production and InsP3
Released by Granulocytes from Type 1 Diabetic Patients in
a cAMP Dependent Manner
Míriam Martins Chaves , Daniela Caldeira Costa,
Denniece Adriana da Costa Souza, Francisco das Chagas Lima
e Silva and José Augusto Nogueira Machado
[Full Text
Article]
Background: Diabetes is associated with a
pro-inflammatory status characterized by an increased production
of inflammatory molecules. Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) and
cAMP elevating agents represent two molecular systems, normally
generated during inflammation. These molecules could be responsible
for the alteration of signaling pathways. In the present paper
we have studied the correlation between ROS generation and
inositolpolyphosphates (InsP1,
InsP2 InsP3
and InsP4) released by granulocytes
from Type 1 diabetic patients (DM1) in the presence or in
the absence of cyclic AMP-elevating agents.
Methods: The effect of cAMP on ROS production
was quantified in a chemoluminescence assay luminol-dependent
(RLU/min). InsP1, InsP2
InsP3 and InsP4
were quantified by inositol-H3
in a Beta-counter and the results were expressed as count
per minute (CPM).
Results: The elevation of intracellular level
of cAMP inhibited both InsP3 and ROS production in granulocytes
from healthy subjects and activated in the cells from Type
1 diabetic patients. InsP1,
InsP2 and InsP4
did not show significant alteration in both studied cells.
There was a significant correlation between InsP3
and ROS in the presence of elevated content of cAMP. This
correlation was observed in a 15 minutes reaction for healthy
subjects and in 120 minutes for DM1.
Conclusions: The importance of both InsP3
release and ROS production in an inflammatory process and
tissue patho-physiology in Type 1 diabetic patients is still
under debate because hyperglycemia accelerates generation
of oxidative stress and may play an important role in the
development of complications in diabetes. Thus, our results
demonstrated alteration in metabolic response in granulocytes
from Type 1 diabetic patients and it may be important for
the development of therapeutic processes and drugs that interfere
with signaling of ROS generation and may contribute to the
improvement of the severe complications of diabetes.
[Back to top]
Tau as a Molecular Marker of Development, Aging and
Neurodegenerative Disorders
Félix Hernández, Mar Pérez, Elena
Gómez de Barreda, Paloma Goñi-Oliver and Jesús
Avila
[Full Text Article]
The purpose of this work is to review the changes that take
place in the microtubule associated protein tau during neuronal
development, aging and neurodegeneration. Human tau protein
is expressed from a single gene located on chromosome 17.
The DNA is transcribed into nuclear RNA and this RNA, by alternative
splicing, yields different mRNA species which are developmentally
regulated. In aging, or in neurodegenerative disorders, post
translational modifications of tau, such as phosphorylation,
could take place, and new tau isoforms may appear. Thus, tau
isoforms can be used as markers to follow neuronal development,
aging or neurodegeneration.
[Back to top]
High Velocity Power Training in Older Adults
Stephen P. Sayers
[Full Text Article]
Increases in both the age and the number of older adults in
the United States will likely result in more people living
with functional limitations and physical disabilities. The
impact of this change in demographics will not only significantly
impact older adult quality of life but may overwhelm existing
health care services for this population. Resistance training
with a strengthening component is currently recommended for
older adults who wish to increase strength and overall health.
However, muscle power has recently been found to contribute
more to improvement in physical functioning than muscle strength
and is becoming a focus of many resistance training studies
in older adults. This review will discuss the current research
supporting the implementation of traditional strength-enhancing
resistance training, examine the contribution of muscle power
to function, explore the rationale for implementing high velocity
power training interventions, and review the recent literature
on these novel power training interventions in older men and
women. Recommendations for future research will be discussed.
[Back to top]
A Tai Chi Chuan Training Model to Improve Balance
Control in Older Adults
Strawberry Gatts
[Full Text Article]
The first goal of this article is to present nine Tai Chi
Chuan training principles and incorporate them into a current
model of motor control and motor learning theory. The second
goal is to present a Tai Chi Chuan training model. The third
goal is to construct a theory as to how Tai Chi Chuan principles
may improve balance and motor skills in an aging population.
Evidence from the areas of motor control, biomechanics, and
human physiology are drawn upon to build a theory of motor
skill learning and construct a Tai Chi Chuan training model.
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