Post-Exercise Hormone Predicts Biological Age

Post-Exercise Hormone Predicts Biological Age

Posted on March 7, 2014, 6 a.m. in Longevity Exercise Mechanisms of Aging
In that calorie restriction has been observed to extend lifespan in mammals, irisin – a newly-identified hormone released from muscle after exercise – is thought to induce similar effects by increasing adipose tissue will energy expenditure by adipose tissue. James Brown, from Aston (University United Kingdom), and colleagues enrolled 81 healthy men and women, ages 18 to 83 years with a mean body mass index (BMI) of between 20 and 30 kg/m2, in a study to assess whether a molecular link exists between circulating irisin levels and the length of telomeres – the endcaps of chromosomes which are thought to be a marker of aging. The team found that those subjects with higher levels of Irisin also had longer telomeres. Writing that: “relative telomere length can be predicted by age and plasma irisin levels,” the study authors Sarah Aldred, David A. Nagel, Alan Nevill, Harpal S. Randeva, Clifford J. Bailey, Srikanth Bellary, James E. Brown. “Plasma irisin levels predict telomere length in healthy adults.” Age, January 2014.
Posted in ,

Comments are closed for this article!