Changing stroke rehab and research worldwide now.Time is Brain! trillions and trillions of neurons that DIE each day because there are NO effective hyperacute therapies besides tPA(only 12% effective). I have 523 posts on hyperacute therapy, enough for researchers to spend decades proving them out. These are my personal ideas and blog on stroke rehabilitation and stroke research. Do not attempt any of these without checking with your medical provider. Unless you join me in agitating, when you need these therapies they won't be there.

What this blog is for:

My blog is not to help survivors recover, it is to have the 10 million yearly stroke survivors light fires underneath their doctors, stroke hospitals and stroke researchers to get stroke solved. 100% recovery. The stroke medical world is completely failing at that goal, they don't even have it as a goal. Shortly after getting out of the hospital and getting NO information on the process or protocols of stroke rehabilitation and recovery I started searching on the internet and found that no other survivor received useful information. This is an attempt to cover all stroke rehabilitation information that should be readily available to survivors so they can talk with informed knowledge to their medical staff. It lays out what needs to be done to get stroke survivors closer to 100% recovery. It's quite disgusting that this information is not available from every stroke association and doctors group.

Sunday, April 19, 2026

This Protein Is The Key To Turning Your Lifestyle Habits Into Muscle by mindbodygreen

 Since your competent? doctor failed at getting you 100% recovered, you'll need this to prevent muscle atrophy. Good luck.

This Protein Is The Key To Turning Your Lifestyle Habits Into Muscle

If you've ever wondered how all of your dietary changes and exercise actually translates to muscle growth, new research offers an answer. Scientists have identified a single protein that's activated by both intermittent fasting and exercise, and it appears to be essential for healthy muscle cell development.
The protein is called PICALM (phosphatidylinositol-binding clathrin assembly protein), and according to a study published in Molecular Metabolism(\1, it may be a key molecular link between lifestyle interventions and muscle health. 

What is PICALM why does it matter

 PICALM is what scientists call a "clathrin adaptor protein." In plain terms, it helps cells internalize and recycle proteins at their surface, a process called clathrin-mediated endocytosis. Think of it this way: Your cells need to constantly bring in nutrients, signaling molecules, and other materials from outside. PICALM helps coordinate this cellular intake process. In muscle cells specifically, this function appears critical for proper development and differentiation into mature, functional muscle fibers 

How fasting exercise both boost PICALM

 Researchers at the German Institute of Human Nutrition set out to identify common molecular factors that respond to both exercise and diet-based interventions for diabetes prevention. They analyzed skeletal muscle from mice subjected to three different lifestyle interventions:Time-restricted feeding (TRF): Eating only during specific hours Alternate-day fasting (ADF):Alternating between eating and fasting daysExercise training:Progressive treadmill training over four weeks. Lean muscle meets smarter metabolism.*In all three intervention groups, scientists found that PICALM was significantly up-regulated compared to controls. The researchers also examined human data. In a cohort of 25 overweight or obese participants, PICALM expression increased in skeletal muscle in every single participant after an aerobic exercise session. The fact that PICALM increased in all 25 human participants after exercise suggests these findings translate beyond mouse models. 

What happens when PICALM is switched off

 To understand PICALM's role in muscle development, the researchers used a technique called siRNA knockdown to deplete PICALM in muscle cells. Here's what the scientists found when PICALM wasn't activated:Picalm-depleted cells couldn't properly develop into mature muscle fibers. Expression of the genes that drive muscle development was significantly reduced. The cells showed an impaired ability to form the fibers that make up functional muscle tissue. 

How PICALM supports muscle development

 So how exactly does PICALM influence muscle cell development? The researchers found it comes down to two interconnected processes: endocytosis and actin remodeling. When PICALM was depleted, cells accumulated over 100 proteins at their surface that should have been internalized. This included proteins involved in: Vesicular trafficking – how cells move materials internally Actin remodeling – how cells reorganize their structural framework Cell adhesion – how cells attach to their surroundings If you've ever wondered how all of your dietary changes and exercise actually translates to muscle growth, new research offers an answer. Scientists have identified a single protein that's activated by both intermittent fasting and exercise, and it appears to be essential for healthy muscle cell development. The protein is called PICALM (phosphatidylinositol-binding clathrin assembly protein), and according to a study published in Molecular Metabolism, it may be a key molecular link between lifestyle interventions and muscle health. 

What is PICALM why does it matter

 PICALM is what scientists call a "clathrin adaptor protein." In plain terms, it helps cells internalize and recycle proteins at their surface, a process called clathrin-mediated endocytosis. Think of it this way: Your cells need to constantly bring in nutrients, signaling molecules, and other materials from outside. PICALM helps coordinate this cellular intake process. In muscle cells specifically, this function appears critical for proper development and differentiation into mature, functional muscle fibers. 

How fasting & exercise both boost PICALM

 Researchers at the German Institute of Human Nutrition set out to identify common molecular factors that respond to both exercise and diet-based interventions for diabetes prevention. They analyzed skeletal muscle from mice subjected to three different lifestyle interventions: Time-restricted feeding (TRF): Eating only during specific hours Alternate-day fasting (ADF): Alternating between eating and fasting days Exercise training: Progressive treadmill training over four weeks In all three intervention groups, scientists found that PICALM was significantly up-regulated compared to controls. The researchers also examined human data. In a cohort of 25 overweight or obese participants, PICALM expression increased in skeletal muscle in every single participant after an aerobic exercise session. The fact that PICALM increased in all 25 human participants after exercise suggests these findings translate beyond mouse models. 

What happens when PICALM is switched off

 To understand PICALM's role in muscle development, the researchers used a technique called siRNA knockdown to deplete PICALM in muscle cells. Here's what the scientists found when PICALM wasn't activated: Picalm-depleted cells couldn't properly develop into mature muscle fibers. Expression of the genes that drive muscle development was significantly reduced. The cells showed an impaired ability to form the fibers that make up functional muscle tissue. 

How PICALM supports muscle development

 So how exactly does PICALM influence muscle cell development? The researchers found it comes down to two interconnected processes: endocytosis and actin remodeling. When PICALM was depleted, cells accumulated over 100 proteins at their surface that should have been internalized. This included proteins involved in:Vesicular trafficking – how cells move materials internally Actin remodeling – how cells reorganize their structural framework Cell adhesion – how cells attach to their surroundings The actin connection proved particularly important. When researchers treated PICALM-depleted cells with a compound that stabilizes actin filaments, the cells' ability to develop into muscle fibers was restored. 

What this means for your fasting & fitness routine

 This research provides molecular evidence for something many in the wellness world have long suspected: both intermittent fasting and exercise support muscle health. But, there are some important things to think about when it comes to fasting and your fitness routine. Fasting doesn't necessarily mean muscle loss. The finding that intermittent fastingmupregulates a protein essential for muscle development challenges the notion that fasting is inherently bad for muscle tissue. Exercise and fasting may be complementary. Since both interventions activate PICALM, combining time-restricted eating with regular exercise could potentially amplify benefits for muscle health. Fasting shouldn't interfere with getting your macronutrients. While fasting does have it's benefits, it's important that you are eating enough hours of the day that you can get in all the protein, fiber and other important nutrients you need. One caveat to mention here: intermittent fasting isn't always the best for women. Women’s bodies rely on a fine-tuned system of hormones that work together to maintain a regular menstrual cycle. This system is highly responsive to stress signals, and intense exercise combined with prolonged fasting can be read by your body as a stress event, which can mess with your hormones. This doesn't mean intermittent fasting is inherently bad, just that it's important to pay attention to any major changes that happen in your body if you begin fasting. And if you notice concerning symptoms, like fatigue, irritability, brain fog, and changes to your menstrual cycle, that might mean intermittent fasting isn't the right choice for you. 

The takeaway

It's worth noting that this research focused on the molecular and cellular level. The researchers didn't measure actual muscle mass or strength outcomes in humans. But it does provide a compelling biological rationale for why these lifestyle interventions may support muscle health. So if you're looking to build up your muscle, this study shows us that exercise and some form of fasting are a good place to start.

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