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2008-08-01 07:23:29
Scientists are moving closer to developing a pill which could deliver some of
the benefits of exercise - even for those who do not move a muscle.
The journal Cell reports US researchers now have two possible pills which
appear able to build muscle, increase stamina and even burn fat.
In tests, mice were able to run 44% further - suggesting humans may be able to
do the same without prior training.
The concept is controversial because of fears they could be misused in sport.
If you like exercise, you like the idea of getting 'more bang for your buck'
Professor Ronald Evans
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
With this in mind, lead researcher Professor Ronald Evans, from the Howard
Hughes Medical Institute, and the Salk Institute in California, has produced a
test which will allow the drugs to be detected in the urine and blood of
competitors.
He says the drugs could eventually help tackle muscle wasting diseases, or help
improve the health benefits of exercise in people at risk of conditions such as
diabetes.
Instant endurance
The two drugs, labelled AICAR and GW1516, appear to have an effect on a gene
involved in the building and regulation of muscle.
This "master gene" - PPAR-delta - has the ability to control the activity of
many other genes - so adjusting it could in theory have a widespread effect on
the way the body works.
Genetically altering mice to enhance the activity of the gene led to the
development of muscle which was much more likely to burn fat than burn sugar.
It also made "marathon mice" who were able to run much further on a treadmill.
The next step was to produce similar effects using a drug rather than a genetic
alteration.
The first version, a pill called GW1516, again produced the "fat burning"
effect, but no change on exercise performance until the team started training
the mice with long treadmill sessions.
At the end of a series of these, the mice given the drug were running 77%
longer than those training without its benefits.
The latest drug, AICAR, goes one step further, finding a different way to act
on the same muscle cell mechanism.
This time the mice did not need to train - after just four weeks on the drug,
they ran 44% further on their treadmills without any prior exercise.
Exercise results
Both versions could one day serve a purpose in humans, said Professor Evans.
"If you like exercise, you like the idea of getting 'more bang for your buck',"
he said.
"If you don't like exercise, you love the idea of getting the benefits from a
pill," he said.
He said the most obvious potential use was in conditions, such as diabetes,
where exercise was a proven benefit.
"Almost no-one gets the recommended 40 minutes to an hour per day of exercise -
for these people, if there was a way to mimic exercise, it would make the
quality of exercise they do more efficient."
However, Colin Palmer, a professor of pharmacogenetics at the University of
Dundee, said that the idea of the drug had proved controversial.
"It's basically a drug that enhances training. The thing that raises eyebrows
is the concept of a drug that improves endurance training for sports
professionals."