| EMBARGOED
UNTIL AUGUST 23, 2004, 5 p.m. Pacific Time (8 p.m.
ET)
UCSD Biologists Develop 'Super-Endurance' Strain Of
Mice
By Kim McDonald
Biologists at
the University of California, San Diego have transformed ordinary
laboratory mice into the rodent equivalent of Olympic endurance
athletes by deleting a gene that allows mammalian muscles to
switch from aerobic to anaerobic metabolism when oxygen levels
in the muscle run low.
In a paper that will
appear in the August 24 issue of the online journal PLoS
Biology, the scientists say the inability of these genetically
modified mice to generate energy through anaerobic metabolism,
the biochemical process used for short sprints or bursts of
power, provides them instead with an extraordinary capacity
for longer, sustained aerobic endurance exercise.
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| Genetically altered “super mouse” on treadmill. Credit: Steven Mason, UCSD |
But while these endurance-enhanced
mice can run and swim to exhaustion in laboratory tests for
far longer periods than their normal counterparts, the scientists
discovered that their super-endurance capabilities appear to
be only temporary and come at a high price. After four days
of exercise tests, the gene-doped endurance mice exhibited significantly
more muscle damage and were unable to run or swim as long as
their normal counterparts.
“It’s a
double-edged sword,” says Randall S. Johnson, a professor
of biology at UCSD, who headed the study. “By changing
the way skeletal muscles respond to low-oxygen levels, we’ve
developed muscles that appear to be superiorly adapted or trained
for long bouts of submaximal aerobic exercise. But these muscles
also become damaged more easily than normal muscles during exercise
and we don’t know why.”
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| Genetically altered “super mouse” on treadmill. Credit: Steven Mason, UCSD |
The
discovery not only has obvious importance for physiologists
and others who study muscle metabolism to maximize human endurance.
It should be of keen interest to medical researchers seeking
treatments for human genetic disorders, such as McArdle’s
disease, whose sufferers tire quickly during exercise because
they have an impaired ability to generate energy through anaerobic
metabolism and experience soreness and pain after exercising
because of the resulting muscle damage.
Most of our daily
activities are performed aerobically, through biochemical mechanisms
in our muscles that make full use of oxygen. But when the demands
of our muscular system exceed its available supply of oxygen,
as in sprinting for a bus or lifting a heavy object, a protein
known as hypoxia inducible transcription factor-1, or HIF-1,
is activated. This protein enables the muscle to switch to the
more energetically explosive, but expensive anaerobic process,
which does not use oxygen and generates lactic acid as its byproduct.
Two years ago, Johnson
and his students discovered that “knocking out”
the HIF-1 gene in the white blood cells of mice limited the
tendency of the cells to rush en masse to areas of
infection, a primary cause of inflammation. By limiting the
cells’ ability to guide themselves with the HIF-1 protein
to the sites of infection by honing in on the low oxygen levels
associated with infections, Johnson and his colleagues found
a new method of reducing inflammation. They also noticed that
these mice had pronounced endurance capabilities on a treadmill.
So the UCSD researchers,
led by Johnson and Steven Mason, a graduate student in Johnson’s
laboratory and the first author of the study, set out to examine
just how much better these super mice were, endurance-wise,
when compared to normal mice. Using four-month-old mice that
lacked the HIF-1 gene in their skeletal muscle, the scientists
subjected groups of super mice and normal mice, with the HIF-1
gene, to a swimming endurance test and two treadmill running
tests.
In the swimming test,
the super mice swam on average 45 minutes longer than normal
mice, which typically swam for 150 minutes before they were
exhausted. In the two running tests, the scientists had the
two groups of mice run on treadmills that were either tilted
upwards by five degrees or downwards by 10 degrees. The treadmills
were started at a speed of 10 meters per minute and increased
in velocity every five minutes until the mice could no longer
run.
The genetically modified
super mice ran an average of 10 minutes longer on the uphill
test than the normal mice, which averaged about 50 minutes.
But those additional 10 minutes also included two velocity increases,
demonstrating that the super mice had superior running as well
as swimming endurance over normal mice, the UCSD scientists
note in their paper.
When running downhill,
however, the normal mice were able to sustain their pace for
a longer period than the super mice without the HIF-1 gene.
The researchers say this was to be expected because the eccentric
contractions required by the leg muscles during downhill running
depend to a greater degree on anaerobic, rather than aerobic
metabolism.
The scientists confirmed
that the superior endurance of the genetically modified mice
resulted from their inability to generate energy anaerobically,
because these super mice had very little lactic acid in their
blood. The elevated activity of mitochondrial enzymes in the
muscles of these mice also demonstrated that their ability to
run and swim for long periods came from their greater dependence
on aerobic metabolism, which produces high levels of such enzymes.
“Our studies
demonstrate that exercise endurance in mice may be a model for
genetic factors in exercise and endurance in humans,”
says Johnson. “The regulation of response to oxygen in
muscle is clearly critical in regulating the sensation of exhaustion
and is important for avoiding muscle damage during extended
exercise.”
The researchers note
in their paper that high levels of mitochondrial enzymes and
low amounts of lactate are typically observed in humans with
phosphofructokinase deficiency and McArdle’s disease.
These individuals, who have an impaired ability to generate
energy through anaerobic metabolism and suffer a high degree
of muscle damage following exercise, also have a pronounced
“second wind,” the researchers state in their paper,
“which allows them to exercise for extended periods of
time at submaximal levels.”
As a result, they add,
mice lacking the HIF-1 gene could prove to be a useful tool
to investigate ways of minimizing muscle damage and developing
other treatments for such individuals as well as “an important
model system to investigate the physiology of muscle response
during work and oxygen depletion.”
In addition to Johnson
and Mason, other UCSD scientists who contributed to the study
included Richard Howlett, Matthew Kim, Mark Olfert, Michael
Hogan, Wayne McNulty and Peter Wagner. Reed Hickey and Fran
Giordano from the Yale University medical school and C. Ronald
Kahn from the Harvard University medical school were also coauthors
of the study, which was supported by grants from the National
Institutes of Health.
Comment: Randall
S. Johnson (858) 699-1634
Media Contact: Kim McDonald
(858) 534-7572
Photos Credit: Steven Mason, UCSD
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