IL-6 signaling in acute exercise and chronic training: Potential consequences for health and athletic performance
The cytokine interleukin-6 (IL-6) is involved in a diverse set of physiological processes. Traditionally, IL-6 has been thought of in terms of its inflammatory actions during the acute phase response and in chronic conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis and obesity. However, IL-6 is also an important signaling molecule during exercise, being acutely released from working muscle fibers with increased exercise duration, intensity, and muscle glycogen depletion. In this context, IL-6 enables muscle-organ crosstalk, facilitating a coordinated response to help maintain muscle energy homeostasis, while also having anti-inflammatory actions. The range of actions of IL-6 can be explained by its dichotomous signaling pathways. Classical signaling involves IL-6 binding to a cell-surface receptor (mbIL-6R; present on only a small number of cell types) and is the predominant signaling mechanism during exercise. Trans-signaling involves IL-6 binding to a soluble version of its receptor (sIL-6R), with the resulting complex having a much greater half-life and the ability to signal in all cell types. Trans-signaling drives the inflammatory actions of IL-6 and is the predominant pathway in disease. A single nucleotide polymorphism (rs2228145) on the IL-6R gene can modify the classical/trans-signaling balance through increasing the levels of sIL-6R. This SNP has clinical significance, having been linked to inflammatory conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis and type 1 diabetes, as well as to the severity of symptoms experienced with COVID-19. This review will describe how acute exercise, chronic training and the rs2228145 SNP can modify the IL-6 signaling pathway and the consequent implications for health and athletic performance.
Funding
European Social Fund
History
Published in
Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in SportsPublisher
WileyVersion
- VoR (Version of Record)
Citation
Nash, D., Hughes, M.G., Butcher, L., Aicheler, R., Smith, P., Cullen, T. and Webb, R. (2022) 'IL‐6 signalling in acute exercise and chronic training: potential consequences for health and athletic performance', Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports. DOI: 10.1111/sms.14241Print ISSN
0905-7188Electronic ISSN
1600-0838Cardiff Met Affiliation
- Cardiff School of Sport and Health Sciences
Cardiff Met Authors
Dan Nash Michael G. Hughes Lee Butcher Rebecca Aicheler Paul Smith Richard WebbCardiff Met Research Centre/Group
- Public Health and Wellbeing
Copyright Holder
- © The Authors
Language
- en