Newswise, April 14, 2016— When you’re pounding along
an icy pavement or sweating through a gym workout, you try to remind yourself
of the many health benefits of exercise.
Between gasps, you can say that a healthy,
fit lifestyle helps prevents obesity, a worldwide problem of increasing
magnitude that has been linked to cardiovascular disease and diabetes.
But here’s one more—exercise may decrease cancer
incidence and slow the growth rate of tumors.
That’s the conclusion of a
mouse-based study published in Cell Metabolism by Line
Pedersen, Pernille Hojman, and colleagues at the University of Copenhagen
reporting that training mice regularly on a wheel (the mouse version of a
treadmill) decreased the growth of multiple types of tumors, including skin,
liver, and lung cancers.
Furthermore, mice that exercised regularly had a
smaller chance of developing cancer in the first place.
The beneficial effects
of running went beyond tumor formation and growth, extending to
cancer-associated weight loss, a process termed cachexia that is seen in cancer
patients. Mice that exercised regularly showed no signs of cancer-associated
weight loss in the researchers’ lung cancer mouse model.
The researchers say they identified several factors
behind the anti-tumor effects of exercise. These anti-cancer effects are linked
to the release of adrenaline (also called epinephrine), a hormone that is
central to the “fight-or-flight” response.
Adrenaline production is known to be stimulated by
exercise. The researchers say that, the production of adrenaline results in a
mobilization of immune cells, specifically one type of immune cell called a
Natural Killer (NK) cell, to patrol the body.
These NK cells are recruited to the site of the
tumor by the protein IL-6, secreted by active muscles. The NK cells can then
infiltrate the tumor, slowing or completely preventing its growth. Importantly,
the researchers note that injecting the mice with either adrenaline or IL-6
without the exercise proved insufficient to inhibit cancer development,
underlining the importance of the effects derived only from regular exercise in
the mice.
Along with offering encouragement for joggers and
lap swimmers everywhere, this research points to the use of NK cells as a
potential therapeutic strategy for multiple tumors.
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