Abstract

Anabolic resistance is defined by a blunted stimulation of muscle protein synthesis rates (MPS) to common anabolic stimuli in skeletal muscle tissue such as dietary protein and exercise. Generally, MPS is the target of most exercise and feeding interventions as muscle protein breakdown rates seem to be less responsive to these stimuli. Ultimately, the blunted responsiveness of MPS to dietary protein and exercise underpins the loss of the amount and quality of skeletal muscle mass leading to decrements in physical performance in these populations. The increase of both habitual physical activity (including structured exercise that targets general fitness characteristics) and protein dense food ingestion are frontline strategies utilized to support muscle mass, performance, and health. In this paper, we discuss anabolic resistance as a common denominator underpinning muscle mass loss with aging, obesity, and other disease states. Namely, we discuss the fact that anabolic resistance exists as a dimmer switch, capable of varying from higher to lower levels of resistance, to the main anabolic stimuli of feeding and exercise depending on the population. Moreover, we review the evidence on whether increased physical activity and targeted exercise can be leveraged to restore the sensitivity of skeletal muscle tissue to dietary amino acids regardless of the population.

Highlights

  • In healthy individuals aged ∼18–50, who are not sedentary and eat sufficient daily amounts of protein and energy, the amount of skeletal muscle mass remains relatively unchanged throughout daily life [1]

  • We have reported that a similar bout of resistance exercise did not augment the myofibrillar protein synthetic response or anabolic signaling after protein ingestion in obese participants compared to a healthy-weight control group [2]

  • A central message of this paper has been that anabolic resistance is a common factor underpinning muscle mass loss with aging and other compromised disease states

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Summary

Frontiers in Nutrition

Anabolic resistance is defined by a blunted stimulation of muscle protein synthesis rates (MPS) to common anabolic stimuli in skeletal muscle tissue such as dietary protein and exercise. The blunted responsiveness of MPS to dietary protein and exercise underpins the loss of the amount and quality of skeletal muscle mass leading to decrements in physical performance in these populations. The increase of both habitual physical activity (including structured exercise that targets general fitness characteristics) and protein dense food ingestion are frontline strategies utilized to support muscle mass, performance, and health.

INTRODUCTION
PROTEIN TURNOVER IN HEALTHY MUSCLE
ANABOLIC RESISTANCE WITH CATABOLIC DISEASES
Findings
CONCLUSION
Full Text
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