At the Dana Farber Cancer Institute, Bruce Spiegelman (right) and Zoltan Arany discovered a genetic switch that may lead to new treatments for muscle-wasting diseases and enhance athletic abilities. Staff photo Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard News Office |
Mystery muscles make mightier miceGene may ease muscle diseases, increase athletic abilityFebruary 1, 2007By William J. Cromie
Scientists have muscled in on a genetic switch that allows mice to run longer and faster. Humans possess the same switch, so the discovery might open new paths to treating muscle-wasting diseases and building better bodies. Last year, Bruce Spiegelman and Alfred Goldberg, professors of cell biology at Harvard Medical School, found that a gene called PGC-1 alpha protects skeletal muscles from wasting away. Spiegelman had discovered alpha in 1998 and a sister gene he named PGC-1 beta in 2002. After finding that alpha has such intriguing prospects, he began experiments to see if beta might also be used to treat such diseases as muscular dystrophy, Lou Gerhrig's disease, and various forms of paralysis. These master switches turn on a cascade of other genes that can transform the muscle fibers that move our bones from one type to another. Biologists catagorize these movers and shakers into four types. Those labeled I and IIA are "slow twitchers," and they support the endurance needed for activities like walking or waiting on long lines. Muscles called IIB, are "fast twitch" types that provide more powerful contractions and come into play for rapid bursts of activity like running. Then there are IIX fibers that serve a mixture of both endurance and quickness, and about which not much is known. Skeletal muscles in animals, including humans, contain a mix of all types, but different fibers are enriched in different locations. Quadriceps in our thighs, for example, contain more fast fibers and help us to run faster. Soleus muscles in our calves hold more slow fibers and aid us in standing for long periods. To find out what the beta gene could do for these muscles and the problems we have with them, Spiegelman assembled a team of experts from two Harvard research hospitals - Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Brigham and Women's Hospital - and Boston University School of Medicine. The team published their findings in the January issue of Cell Metabolism, a scientific journal. This report details how the beta gene can make mighty mice out of normal rodents. |