Health
Exercise hormone just a myth: Study
New York, March 10
Humans cannot produce the "exercise hormone" irisin that previous studies reported, a study says.
Previous
studies suggested that the hormone irisin, first discovered three years
ago, travels from muscle to fat tissue after exercise to tell fat cells
to start burning energy instead of storing it.
The finding
ignited hope and press coverage that irisin could hold the key to
fighting diabetes and obesity, perhaps one day taking the form of a pill
that could melt away the pounds without the hassle of a workout.
But
new research from an international team of scientists has found that
the antibodies used to measure levels of irisin in blood were poorly
vetted and non-specific.
"From the start, the study of irisin has
been complicated by unvalidated reagents and contradictory data that
have raised flags about the existence of irisin and its role in humans
and other species," said one of the study authors Harold Erickson,
professor at Duke University School of Medicine.
"We provide
compelling evidence that the signals reported by previous studies were
due to non-specific blood proteins, not irisin. Hopefully, our findings
will finally convince other researchers to stop chasing a myth,"
Erickson noted.
The irisin levels reported by commercial kits
were actually due to unknown blood proteins, misconstruing the role of
the hormone in human metabolism, the researchers argued.
The
study directly tested the antibodies used in previous analyses and
showed that they cross-reacted with proteins other than irisin, yielding
a false positive result.
Furthermore, none of the proteins
detected by these test kits in any human or animal blood samples were
the correct size to be irisin.
"Our conclusions make sense,
especially in light of the work of other researchers who have shown that
the human version of the FDNC5 gene has a deleterious mutation at the
beginning," Erickson said.
"Humans can not produce the gene FNDC5, and therefore they can not produce irisin," Erickson added.
The study appeared in the journal Scientific Reports.