| Literature DB >> 30426026 |
Emilia Manole1,2, Laura C Ceafalan3,4, Bogdan O Popescu1,5, Carmen Dumitru2, Alexandra E Bastian6,7.
Abstract
Cachexia is an extremely serious syndrome which occurs in most patients with different cancers, and it is characterized by systemic inflammation, a negative protein and energy balance, and involuntary loss of body mass. This syndrome has a dramatic impact on the patient's quality of life, and it is also associated with a low response to chemotherapy leading to a decrease in survival. Despite this, cachexia is still underestimated and often untreated. New research is needed in this area to understand this complex phenomenon and ultimately find treatment methods and therapeutic targets. The skeletal muscle can act as an endocrine organ. Signaling between muscles and other systems is done through myokines, cytokines, and proteins produced and released by myocytes. In this review, we would like to draw attention to some of the most important myokines that could have potential as biomarkers and therapeutic targets: myostatin, irisin, myonectin, decorin, fibroblast growth factor 21, interleukin-6, interleukin-8, and interleukin-15.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30426026 PMCID: PMC6217752 DOI: 10.1155/2018/8260742
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Figure 1Effects of myokines in muscle cachexia. The schematic representation of myokine activity in the skeletal muscle shows the following: except for myostatin, which decreases after exercise, all others have a higher level after effort; between myostatin and decorin, there is an antagonistic relationship of mutual inhibition; the arrows show an activation or stimulation relationship between myokines and various metabolic processes that occur in the skeletal muscle.
The most studied myokines and their action mode in skeletal muscular tissue.
| Myokine | Action | Level after muscle exercise |
|---|---|---|
| Myostatin | Stops myoblast proliferation | Lower level |
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| Irisin | Activates genes related to oxidative metabolism | High level |
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| Myonectin | Induces nutrient uptake | High level especially in muscle, less in circulation |
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| Decorin | Acts antagonistically with myostatin | High level |
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| FGF21 | Induces glucose uptake | High level |
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| IL-6 | Increases glucose uptake, oxidation of fatty acids | High level |
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| IL-8 | Elevated in cancer cachexia, especially like cytokine | High level in muscle, not in plasma |
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| IL-15 | Anabolic effect | High level |