Open access · CC-BY
via OpenAlex
Distinct and additive effects of calorie restriction and rapamycin in aging skeletal muscle
Daniel J. Ham, Anastasiya Börsch, Kathrin Chojnowska, Shuo Lin, Aurel B. Leuchtmann, Alexander S. Ham, Marco Thürkauf, Julien Delezie, Regula Furrer, Dominik Bürri, Michael Sinnreich, Christoph Handschin, Lionel Tintignac, Mihaela Zavolan, Nitish Mittal
Nature Communications · 2022 · ▲ 94 citations
Abstract
Preserving skeletal muscle function is essential to maintain life quality at high age. Calorie restriction (CR) potently extends health and lifespan, but is largely unachievable in humans, making "CR mimetics" of great interest. CR targets nutrient-sensing pathways centering on mTORC1. The mTORC1 inhibitor, mTOR(definition)-inhibiting drug studied for extending healthspan and lifespan." style="text-decoration:underline dotted; text-underline-offset:2px; cursor:help;">rapamycin(definition), is considered a potential CR mimetic and is proven to counteract age-related muscle loss. Therefore, we tested whether rapamycin acts via similar mechanisms as CR to slow muscle aging. Here we show that long-term CR and rapamycin unexpectedly display distinct gene expression profiles in geriatric mouse skeletal muscle, despite both benefiting aging muscles. Furthermore, CR improves muscle integrity in mice with nutrient-insensitive, sustained muscle mTORC1 activity and rapamycin provides additive benefits to CR in naturally aging mouse muscles. We conclude that rapamycin and CR exert distinct, compounding effects in aging skeletal muscle, thus opening the possibility of parallel interventions to counteract muscle aging.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- OpenAlex
- DOI
- 10.1038/s41467-022-29714-6
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-06-13 MST
Cite this
APA
Ham, D.J., Börsch, A., Chojnowska, K., Lin, S., Leuchtmann, A.B., Ham, A.S., Thürkauf, M., Delezie, J., Furrer, R., Bürri, D., Sinnreich, M., Handschin, C., Tintignac, L., Zavolan, M., Mittal, N., & Rüegg, M.A. (2022). Distinct and additive effects of calorie restriction and rapamycin in aging skeletal muscle. <em>Nature Communications</em>. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-29714-6
Vancouver
Ham DJ, Börsch A, Chojnowska K, Lin S, Leuchtmann AB, Ham AS, et al. Distinct and additive effects of calorie restriction and rapamycin in aging skeletal muscle. Nature Communications. 2022. doi:10.1038/s41467-022-29714-6.
BibTeX
@article{daniel2022Distin,
title = {Distinct and additive effects of calorie restriction and rapamycin in aging skeletal muscle},
author = {Daniel J. Ham and Anastasiya Börsch and Kathrin Chojnowska and Shuo Lin and Aurel B. Leuchtmann and Alexander S. Ham and Marco Thürkauf and Julien Delezie and Regula Furrer and Dominik Bürri and Michael Sinnreich and Christoph Handschin and Lionel Tintignac and Mihaela Zavolan and Nitish Mittal and Markus A. Rüegg},
journal = {Nature Communications},
year = {2022},
doi = {10.1038/s41467-022-29714-6},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
Scientific Reports 2019
Open access · CC-BY
Rapamycin modulates tissue aging and lifespan independently of the gut microbiota in Drosophila
Precision medication. 2025
Open access · CC-BY
Molecular aspects of metformin’s anti-aging properties for muscle function and longevity in Drosophila melanogaster
Nature Aging 2025
Open access · CC-BY
The geroprotectors trametinib and rapamycin combine additively to extend mouse healthspan and lifespan
Molecular Medicine 2011
Open access · CC-BY
Rapamycin Ameliorates Dystrophic Phenotype in mdx Mouse Skeletal Muscle
PLoS ONE 2013
Open access · CC-BY
Pharmacological Inhibition of mTORC1 Prevents Over-Activation of the Primordial Follicle Pool in Response to Elevated PI3K Signaling
Nature Communications 2020
Open access · CC-BY