Body composition of all too many older women is characterized by excess body weight and fat mass and reduced fat-free mass (FFM) and muscle mass. Older women also typically have decreased total energy expenditure due to a lowered resting metabolic rate (RMR) and diminished physical activity. These factors have contributed to an increased risk for many age-related disorders, including hypertension, diabetes, heart disease, and impaired strength and mobility. Many of these older women may desire and attempt to reduce their body weight. However, it is increasingly apparent that dieting alone may result in a decline in physical function and health status, including further reductions in muscle mass and strength, and increased risk for mobility disability. In young women, diet-induced weight loss also changes protein and energy metabolism, including a more negative nitrogen balance and a reduction in RMR. Resistance training (RT) has been shown to increase muscle strength and mass, enhance nitrogen retention and protein utilization, increase RMR and total energy requirements, and improve physical functional status in older people. Many of these positive results also occur with RT with weight loss in overweight young women. The combined influences of diet-induced weight loss and RT on protein and energy metabolism are largely unstudied in older women. This R-29 FIRST award proposal will test the hypotheses that diet-induced weight loss in older women will result in significant losses of FFM and skeletal muscle mass, and that these losses will adversely effect protein and energy metabolism and reduce muscle strength and muscle function. The hypotheses that RT, with or without an energy restriction diet, will preserve FFM and muscle mass, increase nitrogen retention and protein metabolism, and preserve RMR, will also be tested. Nitrogen balance techniques will be used to assess protein balance, and the tracers 1-[13C]-leucine and L-[ring2D5]-phenylalanine will be used to assess whole-body and skeletal muscle protein metabolism, respectively. RMR will be measured by indirect calorimetry. Body composition and muscle strength, function, and size will be quantified. Strict dietary control will be maintained by providing protein- and energy-defined menus using the General Clinical Research Center at Noll Laboratory. This study will provide new and important information about effective therapies for the treatment of obesity and prevention of sarcopenia in older women, a segment of the population at risk to physical frailty.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Aging (NIA)
Type
First Independent Research Support & Transition (FIRST) Awards (R29)
Project #
7R29AG013409-07
Application #
6361393
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG4-GRM (01))
Program Officer
Dutta, Chhanda
Project Start
1996-07-01
Project End
2002-06-30
Budget Start
2001-03-01
Budget End
2002-06-30
Support Year
7
Fiscal Year
2000
Total Cost
$68,514
Indirect Cost
Name
Purdue University
Department
Nutrition
Type
Other Domestic Higher Education
DUNS #
072051394
City
West Lafayette
State
IN
Country
United States
Zip Code
47907
Campbell, Wayne W; Haub, Mark D; Wolfe, Robert R et al. (2009) Resistance training preserves fat-free mass without impacting changes in protein metabolism after weight loss in older women. Obesity (Silver Spring) 17:1332-9
Stull, April J; Thyfault, John P; Haub, Mark D et al. (2008) Relationships between urinary inositol excretions and whole-body glucose tolerance and skeletal muscle insulin receptor phosphorylation. Metabolism 57:1545-51
Mahon, Anne K; Flynn, Michael G; Stewart, Laura K et al. (2007) Protein intake during energy restriction: effects on body composition and markers of metabolic and cardiovascular health in postmenopausal women. J Am Coll Nutr 26:182-9
Mahon, A K; Flynn, M G; Iglay, H B et al. (2007) Measurement of body composition changes with weight loss in postmenopausal women: comparison of methods. J Nutr Health Aging 11:203-13
Haub, Mark D; Wells, Amanda M; Campbell, Wayne W (2005) Beef and soy-based food supplements differentially affect serum lipoprotein-lipid profiles because of changes in carbohydrate intake and novel nutrient intake ratios in older men who resistive-train. Metabolism 54:769-74
Campbell, Wayne W; Haub, Mark D; Fluckey, James D et al. (2004) Pinitol supplementation does not affect insulin-mediated glucose metabolism and muscle insulin receptor content and phosphorylation in older humans. J Nutr 134:2998-3003
Campbell, Wayne W; Joseph, Lyndon J O; Ostlund Jr, Richard E et al. (2004) Resistive training and chromium picolinate: effects on inositols and liver and kidney functions in older adults. Int J Sport Nutr Exerc Metab 14:430-42
Kruskall, Laura J; Campbell, Wayne W; Evans, William J (2003) The Atwater energy equivalents overestimate metabolizable energy intake in older humans: results from a 96-day strictly controlled feeding study. J Nutr 133:2581-4
Wells, Amanda M; Haub, Mark D; Fluckey, James et al. (2003) Comparisons of vegetarian and beef-containing diets on hematological indexes and iron stores during a period of resistive training in older men. J Am Diet Assoc 103:594-601
Haub, Mark D; Wells, Amanda M; Tarnopolsky, Mark A et al. (2002) Effect of protein source on resistive-training-induced changes in body composition and muscle size in older men. Am J Clin Nutr 76:511-7

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