Love Hormone Makes Old Muscles New Again

Oxytocin, a hormone associated with nurture and romance, can quickly repair muscles in older mice, new research shows.

“This is the hormone that makes your heart melt when you see kittens, puppies, and human babies,” says Irina Conboy, associate professor of bioengineering at the University of California, Berkeley. “There is an ongoing joke among my research team that we’re all happy, friendly, and trusting because oxytocin permeates the lab.”

Oxytocin is released with a warm hug, a grasped hand, or a loving gaze, and it increases libido. The hormone kicks into high gear during and after childbirth, helping new mothers bond with and breastfeed their new babies. While oxytocin is found in both young boys and girls, it is not yet known when levels of the hormone start to decline in humans, and what levels are necessary for maintaining healthy tissues.

Oxytocin Is An Anti-Aging Molecule that May Help Prevent Osteoporosis

A few other biochemical factors in blood have been connected to aging and disease in recent years, but oxytocin is the first anti-aging molecule identified that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration for clinical use in humans.

Pitocin, a synthetic form of oxytocin, is already used to help with labor and to control bleeding after childbirth. Clinical trials of an oxytocin nasal spray are also under way to alleviate symptoms associated with mental disorders such as autism, schizophrenia, and dementia.


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“Unfortunately, most of the molecules discovered so far to boost tissue regeneration are also associated with cancer, limiting their potential as treatments for humans,” says Conboy, the study’s principal investigator. “Our quest is to find a molecule that not only rejuvenates old muscle and other tissue, but that can do so sustainably long-term without increasing the risk of cancer.”

Oxytocin, secreted into the blood by the brain’s pituitary gland, is a good candidate because it is a broad range hormone that reaches every organ, and it is not known to be associated with tumors or to interfere with the immune system.

Christian Elabd and Wendy Cousin, both senior scientists in Conboy’s lab, are co-lead authors of the study. Previous research by Elabd found that administering oxytocin helped prevent the development of osteoporosis in mice that had their ovaries removed to mimic menopause.

Oxytocin Heals Old Muscles?

The new study, published in Nature Communications, shows that in mice, blood levels of oxytocin decline with age. It also shows there are fewer receptors for oxytocin in muscle stem cells in old versus young mice.

To tease out oxytocin’s role in muscle repair, the researchers injected the hormone under the skin of old mice for four days, and then for five days more after the muscles were injured. After the nine-day treatment, they found that the muscles of the mice that had received oxytocin injections healed far better than those of a control group of mice without oxytocin.

“The action of oxytocin was fast,” Elabd says. “The repair of muscle in the old mice was at about 80 percent of what we saw in the young mice.”

Interestingly, giving young mice an extra boost of oxytocin did not seem to cause a significant change in muscle regeneration.

“This is good because it demonstrates that extra oxytocin boosts aged tissue stem cells without making muscle stem cells divide uncontrollably,” Cousin says.

Oxytocin: A Viable Alternative To Hormone Replacement Therapy?

Blocking the effects of oxytocin in young mice rapidly compromises their ability to repair muscle, which resembles old tissue after an injury.

The researchers also studied mice whose gene for oxytocin was disabled, and compared them with a group of control mice. At a young age, there was no significant difference between the two groups in muscle mass or repair efficiency after an injury. It wasn’t until the mice with the disabled oxytocin gene reached adulthood that signs of premature aging began to appear.

“When disabling other types of genes associated with tissue repair, defects appear right away either during embryonic development, or early in life,” says Conboy. “To our knowledge, the oxytocin gene is the only one whose impact is seen later in life, suggesting that its role is closely linked to the aging process.”

Oxytocin could become a viable alternative to hormone replacement therapy as a way to combat the symptoms of both female and male aging, and for long-term health, Cousins says. Hormone therapy did not show improvements in agility or muscle regeneration ability, and it is no longer recommended for disease prevention because research has found that the therapy’s benefits don’t outweigh its health risks.

Oxytocin is Predicted to Improve Bone Health and Combat Obesity

In addition to healthy muscle, oxytocin is predicted to improve bone health, and it might be important in combating obesity.

Conboy says her lab plans to examine oxytocin’s role in extending a healthy life in animals, and in conserving its beneficial anti-aging effects in humans. She notes that there is a growing circle of scientists who believe that aging is the underlying cause of a number of chronic diseases, including Parkinson’s and Type 2 diabetes.

“If you target processes associated with aging, you may be tackling those diseases at the same time,” she says. “Aging is a natural process, but I believe that we can meaningfully intervene with age-imposed organ degeneration, thereby slowing down the rate at which we become progressively unhealthy.”

The SENS Research Foundation, the National Institute on Aging, and the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine helped support this research.

Source of study: UC Berkeley.
This article originally appeared on Futurity


About the Author

Sarah YangSarah Yang is Senior Media Communications Specialist/Science Writer at UC Berkeley. Sarah has a master's degree in journalism from the University of California at Berkeley, and an undergraduate degree from the College of William and Mary. Sarah has covered health and medicine either as a freelance writer or staff reporter for a variety of news organizations including CNN.com, the Los Angeles Times, the San Francisco Examiner, as well as at WebMD.


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