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Exerkines in health, resilience and disease

Authors :
Lisa S. Chow
Robert E. Gerszten
Joan M. Taylor
Bente K. Pedersen
Henriette van Praag
Scott Trappe
Mark A. Febbraio
Zorina S. Galis
Yunling Gao
Jacob M. Haus
Ian R. Lanza
Carl J. Lavie
Chih-Hao Lee
Alejandro Lucia
Cedric Moro
Ambarish Pandey
Jeremy M. Robbins
Kristin I. Stanford
Alice E. Thackray
Saul Villeda
Matthew J. Watt
Ashley Xia
Juleen R. Zierath
Bret H. Goodpaster
Michael P. Snyder
Source :
ABACUS. Repositorio de Producción Científica, Universidad Europea (UEM), Nat Rev Endocrinol
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The health benefits of exercise are well-recognized and are observed across multiple organ systems. These beneficial effects enhance overall resilience, healthspan and longevity. The molecular mechanisms that underlie the beneficial effects of exercise, however, remain poorly understood. Since the discovery in 2000 that muscle contraction releases IL-6, the number of exercise-associated signalling molecules that have been identified has multiplied. Exerkines are defined as signalling moieties released in response to acute and/or chronic exercise, which exert their effects through endocrine, paracrine and/or autocrine pathways. A multitude of organs, cells and tissues release these factors, including skeletal muscle (myokines), the heart (cardiokines), liver (hepatokines), white adipose tissue (adipokines), brown adipose tissue (baptokines) and neurons (neurokines). Exerkines have potential roles in improving cardiovascular, metabolic, immune and neurological health. As such, exerkines have potential for the treatment of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes mellitus and obesity, and possibly in the facilitation of healthy ageing. This Review summarizes the importance and current state of exerkine research, prevailing challenges and future directions. Sin financiación 5.05º JCR (2021) Q2, 47/146 Endocrinology & Metabolism 8.561 SJR (2021) Q1, 2/128 Endocrinology No data IDR 2021 UEM

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ABACUS. Repositorio de Producción Científica, Universidad Europea (UEM), Nat Rev Endocrinol
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a02fa21e31346ffd82adcf7eb526e525