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Abstract
Hormones with anabolic properties such as growth hormone (GH), insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-I), and insulin are commonly abused among professional and recreational athletes to enhance physical ability. Performance enhancing drugs (PEDs) such as these are also commonly used by recreational athletes to improve body aesthetics. The perception of increased muscle mass due to supraphysiologic hormone supplementation, or doping, is widespread among PED users despite a paucity of evidence-based data in humans. Even still, athletes will continue to abuse PEDs in hopes of replicating anecdotal results. It is important to educate the general public and potential treating physicians of the risks of PED use, including the dangers of polypharmacy and substance dependence. It will also be important for the research community to address the common challenges associated with studying PED use such as the ethical considerations of PED administration, the general reticence of the PED-using community to volunteer information, and the constant need to improve or create new detection methods as athletes continually attempt to circumvent current methods. This review highlights the anabolic mechanisms and suggestive data implicating GH, IGF-I, and insulin for use as PEDs, the specific detection methods with cutoff ranges that may be utilized to diagnose abuse of each substance, and their respective side effects.
Keywords
Drug abuse
Performance enhancing drugs
Muscle
Side effects
Doping
Sports
Abbreviations
PED
performance enhancing drug
AAS
anabolic-androgenic steroids
PI3K
phosphoinositol 3-kinase
mTOR
mammalian target of rapamycin
FOXO3a
Forkhead boxO3a
MuRF-1
muscle RING finger 1
GSK3
glycogen synthase kinase 3
MGF
muscle-specific IGF-I
MAPK
mitogen activated protein kinase
IRS
insulin receptor substrate
P-III-NP
procollagen type III amino-terminal propeptide
ALS
acid-labile subunit
1. Introduction
Skeletal muscle is critical for execution of movement, thermogenesis, and nutrient metabolism. Proficiency of these processes is dependent on skeletal muscle mass which is largely regulated by exercise, nutrition, hormones, and to a lesser extent, genetics and ethnicity. As skeletal muscle is a plastic tissue, it responds to progressive overload, such as resistance training, or amino acid ingestion by altering protein synthesis and degradation in favor of tissue growth, or anabolism. Hormones with anabolic properties induce similar responses in skeletal muscle, increasing protein synthesis and/or decreasing protein degradation through a variety of downstream pathways after binding their respective receptors.
Reported enhancements of muscle mass and/or performance from supplementation with exogenous anabolic hormones have encouraged athletes to seek out performance enhancing drugs (PED) for a competitive edge. In an effort to protect elite and professional athletes from the unknown health consequences of PED abuse, the 2004 Anabolic Steroid Control Act expanded the list of controlled substances regulated by the federal government to include naturally occurring precursors of testosterone, growth hormone (GH), and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-I). Although efforts have been made to protect athletes from doping, PED use has also spread to non-professional athletes and to the general population due to ease of access via the web and black market. These individuals have turned to PEDs primarily to improve body aesthetics (Pope et al., 2017) but also to improve energy levels, sex drive, and athletic performance (Creado and Reardon, 2016).
The use of anabolic-androgenic steroids (AAS) such as testosterone and its derivatives has been described extensively (Creado and Reardon, 2016,Pope et al., 2014); however, less attention has been placed on the use of other common PEDs such as GH, IGF-I, and insulin. In 1992, 5% of male high school students admitted to taking GH at some point in their high school sport careers, and about one-third of the participants knew a classmate who had taken GH (Rickert et al., 1992). Middle-aged and elderly people often seek GH with hopes of improving muscle mass and obtaining more youthful physical qualities. PED abuse has also grown in the weightlifting community with 27 of 231 (12%) weightlifters polled reporting past and/or present GH or IGF-I use with over 80% of those polled also exhibiting signs of past or present AAS dependency (Brennan et al., 2011). Insulin is also a commonly used PED by body builders for its purported anabolic properties such as stimulation of glycogen formation, which is important for muscle recovery after exercise, and its accessibility from local pharmacies (Dawson and Harrison, 1997,Evans and Lynch, 2003).
At the molecular level, the balance of anabolic and catabolic (protein degrading) processes is coordinated primarily by the phosphoinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/Akt/mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR)/Forkhead boxO3a (FOXO3a) pathway among others (Glass, 2005). mTOR is a key mediator contributing to muscle protein synthesis and can be activated by PI3K/Akt (Gulati et al., 2008), which are, in turn, activated by growth factor signaling, such as insulin and IGF-I (Sandri, 2008). Akt phosphorylates, thereby inhibiting, FOXO3a which is a transcription factor that induces the proteosomal pathway by up-regulating the ubiquitin ligases atrogin-1 and muscle RING finger 1 (MuRF-1) (Salih and Brunet, 2008,Stitt et al., 2004). Akt also inhibits glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK3), removing the GSK3-induced inhibition of mRNA translation initiation (Leger et al., 2006). Importantly, when the size of a muscle fiber increases, activation of muscle precursor cells, or satellite cells, is required for provision of additional nuclear machinery to support the growing tissue (Hawke and Garry, 2001). Activation of Akt also affects glucose metabolism inducing an increase in glucose and amino acid uptake (Edinger and Thompson, 2002,Kohn et al., 1996). Growth hormone, IGF-I, and insulin are known to influence these pathways, which have provided the basis for their use as PEDs (see Fig. 1).
Fig. 1
This review will highlight the pharmacologic basis for and misuse, detection, and side effects of GH, IGF-I, and insulin as PED in sports and the larger recreational community. The impact of polypharmacy will also be addressed as this is an important factor in doping regimens.
Abstract
Hormones with anabolic properties such as growth hormone (GH), insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-I), and insulin are commonly abused among professional and recreational athletes to enhance physical ability. Performance enhancing drugs (PEDs) such as these are also commonly used by recreational athletes to improve body aesthetics. The perception of increased muscle mass due to supraphysiologic hormone supplementation, or doping, is widespread among PED users despite a paucity of evidence-based data in humans. Even still, athletes will continue to abuse PEDs in hopes of replicating anecdotal results. It is important to educate the general public and potential treating physicians of the risks of PED use, including the dangers of polypharmacy and substance dependence. It will also be important for the research community to address the common challenges associated with studying PED use such as the ethical considerations of PED administration, the general reticence of the PED-using community to volunteer information, and the constant need to improve or create new detection methods as athletes continually attempt to circumvent current methods. This review highlights the anabolic mechanisms and suggestive data implicating GH, IGF-I, and insulin for use as PEDs, the specific detection methods with cutoff ranges that may be utilized to diagnose abuse of each substance, and their respective side effects.
Keywords
Drug abuse
Performance enhancing drugs
Muscle
Side effects
Doping
Sports
Abbreviations
PED
performance enhancing drug
AAS
anabolic-androgenic steroids
PI3K
phosphoinositol 3-kinase
mTOR
mammalian target of rapamycin
FOXO3a
Forkhead boxO3a
MuRF-1
muscle RING finger 1
GSK3
glycogen synthase kinase 3
MGF
muscle-specific IGF-I
MAPK
mitogen activated protein kinase
IRS
insulin receptor substrate
P-III-NP
procollagen type III amino-terminal propeptide
ALS
acid-labile subunit
1. Introduction
Skeletal muscle is critical for execution of movement, thermogenesis, and nutrient metabolism. Proficiency of these processes is dependent on skeletal muscle mass which is largely regulated by exercise, nutrition, hormones, and to a lesser extent, genetics and ethnicity. As skeletal muscle is a plastic tissue, it responds to progressive overload, such as resistance training, or amino acid ingestion by altering protein synthesis and degradation in favor of tissue growth, or anabolism. Hormones with anabolic properties induce similar responses in skeletal muscle, increasing protein synthesis and/or decreasing protein degradation through a variety of downstream pathways after binding their respective receptors.
Reported enhancements of muscle mass and/or performance from supplementation with exogenous anabolic hormones have encouraged athletes to seek out performance enhancing drugs (PED) for a competitive edge. In an effort to protect elite and professional athletes from the unknown health consequences of PED abuse, the 2004 Anabolic Steroid Control Act expanded the list of controlled substances regulated by the federal government to include naturally occurring precursors of testosterone, growth hormone (GH), and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-I). Although efforts have been made to protect athletes from doping, PED use has also spread to non-professional athletes and to the general population due to ease of access via the web and black market. These individuals have turned to PEDs primarily to improve body aesthetics (Pope et al., 2017) but also to improve energy levels, sex drive, and athletic performance (Creado and Reardon, 2016).
The use of anabolic-androgenic steroids (AAS) such as testosterone and its derivatives has been described extensively (Creado and Reardon, 2016,Pope et al., 2014); however, less attention has been placed on the use of other common PEDs such as GH, IGF-I, and insulin. In 1992, 5% of male high school students admitted to taking GH at some point in their high school sport careers, and about one-third of the participants knew a classmate who had taken GH (Rickert et al., 1992). Middle-aged and elderly people often seek GH with hopes of improving muscle mass and obtaining more youthful physical qualities. PED abuse has also grown in the weightlifting community with 27 of 231 (12%) weightlifters polled reporting past and/or present GH or IGF-I use with over 80% of those polled also exhibiting signs of past or present AAS dependency (Brennan et al., 2011). Insulin is also a commonly used PED by body builders for its purported anabolic properties such as stimulation of glycogen formation, which is important for muscle recovery after exercise, and its accessibility from local pharmacies (Dawson and Harrison, 1997,Evans and Lynch, 2003).
At the molecular level, the balance of anabolic and catabolic (protein degrading) processes is coordinated primarily by the phosphoinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/Akt/mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR)/Forkhead boxO3a (FOXO3a) pathway among others (Glass, 2005). mTOR is a key mediator contributing to muscle protein synthesis and can be activated by PI3K/Akt (Gulati et al., 2008), which are, in turn, activated by growth factor signaling, such as insulin and IGF-I (Sandri, 2008). Akt phosphorylates, thereby inhibiting, FOXO3a which is a transcription factor that induces the proteosomal pathway by up-regulating the ubiquitin ligases atrogin-1 and muscle RING finger 1 (MuRF-1) (Salih and Brunet, 2008,Stitt et al., 2004). Akt also inhibits glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK3), removing the GSK3-induced inhibition of mRNA translation initiation (Leger et al., 2006). Importantly, when the size of a muscle fiber increases, activation of muscle precursor cells, or satellite cells, is required for provision of additional nuclear machinery to support the growing tissue (Hawke and Garry, 2001). Activation of Akt also affects glucose metabolism inducing an increase in glucose and amino acid uptake (Edinger and Thompson, 2002,Kohn et al., 1996). Growth hormone, IGF-I, and insulin are known to influence these pathways, which have provided the basis for their use as PEDs (see Fig. 1).
Fig. 1
This review will highlight the pharmacologic basis for and misuse, detection, and side effects of GH, IGF-I, and insulin as PED in sports and the larger recreational community. The impact of polypharmacy will also be addressed as this is an important factor in doping regimens.
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