Biology (Jun 2022)

Irisin Attenuates Muscle Impairment during Bed Rest through Muscle-Adipose Tissue Crosstalk

  • Andrea D’Amuri,
  • Juana Maria Sanz,
  • Stefano Lazzer,
  • Rado Pišot,
  • Bostjan Šimunič,
  • Gianni Biolo,
  • Giovanni Zuliani,
  • Mladen Gasparini,
  • Marco Narici,
  • Bruno Grassi,
  • Carlo Reggiani,
  • Edoardo Dalla Nora,
  • Angelina Passaro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biology11070999
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 7
p. 999

Abstract

Read online

The detrimental effect of physical inactivity on muscle characteristics are well known. Irisin, an exercise-induced myokine cleaved from membrane protein fibronectin type III domain-containing protein-5 (FNDC5), mediates at least partially the metabolic benefits of exercise. This study aimed to assess the interplay between prolonged inactivity, circulating irisin, muscle performance, muscle fibers characteristics, as well as the FNDC5 gene expression (FNDC5ge) in muscle and adipose tissue among healthy subjects. Twenty-three healthy volunteers were tested before and after 14 days of Bed Rest, (BR). Post-BR circulating levels of irisin significantly increased, whereas body composition, muscle performance, and muscle fiber characteristics deteriorated. Among the subjects achieving the highest post-BR increase of irisin, the lowest reduction in maximal voluntary contraction and specific force of Fiber Slow/1, the highest increase of FNDC5ge in adipose tissue, and no variation of FNDC5ge in skeletal muscle were recorded. Subjects who had the highest FNDC5ge in adipose tissue but not in muscle tissue showed the highest circulating irisin levels and could better withstand the harmful effect of BR.

Keywords