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Exercise hormone may help combat Alzheimer’s, research suggests

Drugs based on the hormone irisin could help to stave off dementia in physically inactive patients, scientists claim.

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A jogger in a field

A hormone released during exercise may protect the brain against Alzheimer’s disease, research suggests.

Irisin is a messenger protein generated by muscle tissue that is carried around the body in the bloodstream.

The new evidence indicates that it may be behind the known positive effects on mental performance of taking exercise.

US and Brazilian scientists found lower levels of the hormone in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients compared with healthy individuals. The same was true for the precursor protein from which irisin is derived, FNDC5.

In tests on genetically engineered mice, the scientists induced learning and memory deficits by cutting out irisin.

They were able to reverse these effects by restoring the hormone.

When irisin signalling was blocked in mice with a rodent version of Alzheimer’s, the brain benefits of physical exercise were lost.

The research, led by Dr Fernana de Felice, from the Federal University of Rio de Janerio in Brazil, is reported in the journal Nature Medicine.

Bostering irisin, either with drugs or through exercise, could provide a “novel strategy” for preventing cognitive decline in patients with Alzheimer’s disease, said the scientists.

They wrote: “Our results demonstrate that FNDC5/irisin levels are reduced in human AD (Alzheimer’s disease) brains and CSF (cerebrospinal fluid) and in AD mouse models, and that boosting either brain or peripheral FNDC5/irisin levels attenuates synaptic and memory impairments in AD mouse models.”

Further research was needed to understand exactly how irisin enters the brain and interacts with it, the team added.

British experts pointed out that the research, though promising, was at a very early stage.

Dr Rosa Sancho, from the charity Alzheimer’s Research UK, said: “We know that physical activity is linked to better brain health as we age, and this research highlights a biological mechanism that may contribute to this beneficial effect.

“These interesting findings present a new avenue for future research that could help us better understand how exercise programmes could be targeted to provide the greatest benefit to brain health.

“There are many people either with dementia or at high risk of dementia, who have health conditions that make regular exercise more difficult.

“Drugs designed to target the hormone identified in this research could potentially bring some of the benefits of physical activity to people who may be less able to exercise.”

Dr James Pickett, head of research at the Alzheimer’s Society charity, said: “Although this study was only in mice, it adds to mounting evidence of the relationship between lifestyle factors, like physical fitness, and dementia. This is a promising avenue for more research and potentially new therapies in future.”

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