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Exercise Alters your DNA

Dale Mabry

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Exercise Alters Your DNA

It turns out that you aren't just what you eat -- you're also "what you do," according to Juleen Zierath, professor of clinical integrative physiology at the Karolinska Institutet in Sweden.

Zierath and colleagues recently found that healthy, but inactive young adults experienced an immediate change to their muscle cells' genetic material when they engaged in just a few moments of exercise on a stationary bicycle.

Specifically, samples of thigh muscle from the study participants had fewer markers of methyl-group chemicals after exercise than they did before it. Those methyl groups, in turn, are used to moderate genetic expression. The changes were seen specifically in areas that affect genes responsible for energy metabolism -- by contrast, areas that were unrelated to metabolism had steady levels of methyl group chemicals. What's more, the harder the brief workout, the more demethylized the metabolism-related regions became.

The genetic changes that occur from exercise are happening in the epigenome, which is responsible for the expression of genes. While we inherit our genetic code from our parents, environmental factors like lifestyle play a large role in whether or not a gene is "turned on" so that its function can be expressed. As HuffPost blogger Dr. Frank Lipman recently explained:

The epigenome changes in response to signals. Signals come from inside the cell, from neighboring cells or from the outside world.

It is through the epigenome that environmental factors like diet, stress and prenatal nutrition can make an imprint on genes that pass from one generation to the next. Bottom line: While each of us inherits our own unique, hardwired, unchangeable version of the genetic code, epigenetic factors such as lifestyle and diet can radically change what our genes do.

In the specific case of exercise, researchers theorized that muscle contractions could be what's stimulating the demethylization. They performed a secondary experiment in which they exposed rodent muscle cells directly to caffeine, which causes a chemical reaction that mimics muscle contraction. They found that the cells had similar demethylation as the live, human study participants' muscle cells. Does that mean a cup of coffee will bring the same metabolic change? Chances are slim. “One would need to consume a caffeine equivalent of about 50 cups per day, almost close to a lethal dose”, Zierath told Nature. “Exercising is far easier if you ask me.”

The research was published in the March issue of Cell Metabolism.

Exercise Alters Your DNA
 
Exercise brings on DNA changes sciencenews.org
By Rebecca Cheung
Web edition : 3:43 pm


Exercise can make over muscles — even at the DNA level.

Following an intense workout, certain chemical alterations to DNA appear in a person’s muscle cells, researchers report in the March 7 Cell Metabolism. These alterations turn on genes that regulate a cell’s energy.

This work helps clarify the mechanism by which exercise benefits cells. And it raises questions about whether the benefits of an active lifestyle are passed from parent to child, says study coauthor Romain Barrès of the University of Copenhagen. “Do we carry some consequence of whether our parents were active or not?” Barrès asks.

Genes can be turned on or off by a process known as methylation, in which a methyl group — consisting of one carbon atom and three hydrogen atoms — is added to DNA. This chemical tag can turn genes on or off, modifying the production of blueprints for making proteins.

Previously, scientists have shown that exercise can boost the activity of certain genes that can make proteins that regulate cellular powerhouses called mitochondria. Still, it was not clear what caused that boost.

For the new study, scientists analyzed biopsied cells from thigh muscles of adults who had completed low- and high-impact cycling workouts. After the more strenuous workout, muscle cells had fewer methyl groups attached to DNA and higher levels of blueprints for energy-regulating proteins compared with cells that had undergone a low-impact workout.

The researchers also exposed rat muscle cells to caffeine, which boosts a cell’s available calcium, an important component of muscle contraction. Caffeine exposure also seemed to result in fewer methyl groups attached to DNA and more protein blueprints produced.

This study opens up new ideas about the role of chemical modifications such as methylation in muscle function and development, says Michael Skinner, a researcher at Washington State University in Pullman. He also says that further research will need to examine whether other genes are affected by the chemical modifications to DNA found in this study.

“What this likely suggests is that if you did this early in life, while muscles were being developed, that might actually program the muscle,” Skinner says.
 
Very interesting reads! Do you guys have a favorite place to read up more on this?
 
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