Fasting (skipping meals, eating in a narrow window, or eating once a day — OMAD) is widely cited as a longevity intervention. The science is real — but it’s almost entirely studied on overweight, sedentary, or pre-diabetic subjects, plus a lot of lab mice. For a lean ultra-runner, the same protocol is at best useless and at worst actively harmful.
This page explains the underlying biology (AMPK vs mTOR), why the studies don’t generalise, and what does make sense for this phenotype.
The two pathways
Cells run two opposing programmes. They are biologically incompatible — you can’t be in both at once.
AMPK — the “repair / starvation” pathway
When the body senses low energy (fasting, calorie restriction, prolonged exercise), it activates AMPK. The signal is: “resources are scarce, stop growing, recycle what we have.”
- Triggers autophagy — cells eat broken proteins, damaged organelles, and potentially pre-cancerous junk for fuel. The biological “deep clean.”
- Suppresses growth — protein synthesis slows, muscle building stops, fat storage stops.
- Effects on lifespan in lab studies: strong positive in mice; modest positive in overweight humans.
mTOR — the “growth” pathway
When the body senses abundant energy (food, protein, lifting), mTOR activates. The signal is: “we have resources, build tissue.”
- Drives muscle synthesis, bone deposition, immune-cell production.
- Suppresses autophagy — the cleanup signal is muted while growth is happening.
- Effects on aging: essential. Sarcopenia (muscle loss with age) is the failure of mTOR signalling. Frailty in the 70s is downstream of insufficient mTOR activity in the 50s and 60s.
Why the fasting evidence doesn’t apply to lean endurance athletes
Most fasting studies recruit subjects who are:
- BMI 28–35 (overweight to obese)
- Sedentary
- Pre-diabetic or insulin-resistant
- Have surplus fat to burn
For these subjects, AMPK activation produces clear benefits because their baseline state is over-fed, over-mTOR’d, and inflamed.
A 64 kg lean ultra-runner is the opposite phenotype in every dimension. The body already runs AMPK-dominant most of the day because:
- Body fat is already low; no surplus to oxidise
- Daily running depletes glycogen and triggers AMPK naturally
- Lean muscle mass is already at the lower end of the healthy range
Adding fasting on top means cannibalising muscle and bone for fuel. The mechanism is straightforward:
- The body needs ATP. Glycogen is already depleted from exercise.
- With no incoming food, gluconeogenesis ramps up — converting amino acids into glucose.
- Those amino acids come from where? Skeletal muscle and connective tissue.
Over months and years, this accelerates sarcopenia (muscle wasting) and bone density loss — the exact opposite of what a lean person needs for longevity.
The actual longevity threat for lean people
For the lean phenotype, the #1 longevity risk is not lack of autophagy. It’s:
- Falling at 75 because there’s no muscle reserve to catch the body
- Hip fracture at 80 because bone density was already low
- Frailty in the 70s because mTOR signalling was suppressed for decades
This is the case for prioritising mTOR (growth) — eat enough, hit the protein target, lift heavy. See Strength Targets for Lean Athletes and Hardgainer Eating Strategy.
Exercise IS autophagy for endurance athletes
The good news: you don’t need to starve to get the repair benefits.
Intense exercise activates massive autophagy — both endurance work and resistance training. The mechanical stress, glycogen depletion, and oxidative load during a 2-hour run turn on the same cellular cleanup pathway that fasting does for a sedentary person.
A lifelong runner is getting daily autophagy doses without any food restriction. Adding OMAD on top is double-dipping at the cost of muscle and bone.
What does make sense — gentle time-restricted eating
A mild eating window has real benefits without the muscle cannibalisation:
- 12-hour overnight fast. Stop eating at 8 PM, eat breakfast at 8 AM. Gives the digestive tract real rest and allows the glymphatic system to clear the brain during deep sleep.
- 14-hour window (8 PM → 10 AM) is the upper end for an active lean person — and only if total daily calories and protein are not compromised.
- Anything narrower (16:8, OMAD) starts to compromise total intake and trigger the muscle-loss pathway.
The 12-hour version is essentially “eat dinner, sleep, eat breakfast.” Most people already do this without naming it.
What to do with the bro-science claims
There’s a class of fasting advocacy that promises specific benefits: cellular cleanup, growth hormone spikes, mental clarity, cancer prevention. Some of these are real in lab settings; almost none have been demonstrated in lean active humans.
If the fasting claim sounds too good to be true and the protocol involves eating less, it’s almost certainly aimed at someone in a different metabolic state than a lean ultra-runner.
The Attia-aligned consensus for active lean adults:
- Don’t fast aggressively
- Eat enough protein at every meal
- Lift heavy
- Treat exercise as the autophagy stimulus
- Use a 12-hour overnight window as the maximum
Summary
| Phenotype | Best dietary frame |
|---|---|
| Sedentary, overweight, insulin-resistant | Time-restricted eating (16:8) or even OMAD; calorie deficit |
| Lean, sedentary | 12–14 hour overnight window; moderate calories |
| Lean, active endurance athlete | 12-hour overnight window; calorie surplus; high protein |
| Lean, hardgainer trying to build muscle | 12-hour window; substantial surplus; see Hardgainer Eating Strategy |
| Athlete with metabolic syndrome | Discuss with a clinician — fasting may or may not help, depending |