Strength training boosts irisin levels

Irisin is a hormone that breaks down fat tissue, inhibits cancer cell development and delays aging processes. According to sports scientists at Seoul National University, strength training can increase the amount of the hormone that muscles secrete. The more muscle tissue strength athletes build up, the more irisin their muscles pump into the bloodstream.

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Irisin is an extremely interesting hormone. It is made by muscle cells and inhibits the growth of cancer cells. Irisin may be the reason why hundreds of studies have shown that physical exercise drastically reduces the chance of developing cancer and increases the survival chances of people who already have cancer.

Irisin is also a longevity hormone. Researchers have found high concentrations of irisin in the blood of people who live to be very old and are healthy. Irisin may also be behind why natural bodybuilders also live to an improbably old age in good health. Their muscle tissue protects them against the processes of aging.

The effect of training on the concentration of irisin [spatial structure on the right] in the blood is not yet clear. Researchers at the University of Harvard reported in 2012 that endurance training boosts the concentration of irisin in the blood [Nature. 2012 Jan 11;481(7382):463-8.], but other researchers have not found any significant effects of endurance training on irisin levels. [Nature. 2012 Aug 30;488(7413):E9-10; discussion E10-1.]

Experiments in which researchers combined endurance and strength training have not produced statistically significant effects either. [FEBS J. 2014 Feb;281(3):739-49.]

Study
The researchers divided 20 overweight subjects (their fat percentage was over 30 percent) into three groups. One group did nothing at all for the 8 weeks that the experiment lasted and functioned as the control group. A second group trained five days a week in a gym, doing an hour of cardio training each session. A third group trained as well, but did strength training.

The researchers gradually increased the intensity of the workouts for both active groups as the experiment progressed.

Results
At the end of the 8 weeks, the researchers found more irisin in the blood of the men who had done cardio training [AT], but the increase was not significant. The men who had done strength training [RT] had more irisin in their blood, and the increase was statistically significant.

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The training programmes changed the subjects’ body composition: their muscle mass increased and fat mass decreased. The stronger the effects, the bigger the rise in the irisin level.

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That an increase in muscle mass is accompanied by an rise in irisin concentration is not surprising, but how a decrease in body fat boosts irisin levels remains a mystery to the Koreans. Does fat mass inhibit the synthesis of irisin by the muscles? Or was the decrease in fat mass a consequence of the higher levels of irisin?

Follow-up studies are needed to throw more light on the matter, the researchers write.

Conclusion
“The findings of our research provided an insight for an approach to increase circulating irisin level in overweight and obese adults with resistance exercise training”, the Koreans summarise. “Although an association between exercise-induced irisin and body composition change was found in obese adults, we could not evaluate their causal relationship in this study. Therefore, future study should cover the role of exercise-induced irisin on body composition including muscle mass and fat mass.”

Effect of aerobic training and resistance training on circulating irisin level and their association with change of body composition in overweight/obese adults: a pilot study.

Abstract

The novel myokine irisin has been reported as a therapeutic target for metabolic disease. The objective of this study is to reveal the effects of aerobic training (AT) and resistance training (RT) on circulating irisin levels and their associations with change of body composition in overweight/obese adults. Twenty eight overweight/obese adults (BMI>23 kg/m(2)) were included in this study and compared before and after 8 weeks of exercise program (60 min/day, 5 times in a week). The subjects, in both aerobic and resistance training, showed significant improvement in anthropometric parameters and exercise capacities including maximal oxygen uptake and muscle strength. Interestingly, the circulating irisin was significantly increased in resistance training group (p=0.002) but not in aerobic training (p=0.426) compared to control group. In addition, we found the positive correlation between change of the circulating irisin and muscle mass (r=0.432, p=0.022) and the negative correlation between change of the circulating irisin and fat mass (r=-0.407, p=0.031). In the present pilot study, we found that circulating irisin level was increased by 8 weeks of resistance training in overweight/obese adults, suggesting that resistance training could be the efficient exercise type in overweight/obese considering positive change of body composition concomitant with increase of irisin levels.

PMID: 26447516 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

Source: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26447516

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