The Mail on Sunday

Working out could boost the immune system too

- By Jonathan Neal

THE benefits of exercising may partly be due to the way that being active enhances the immune system, scientists have suggested.

Researcher­s at Harvard Medical School found that exercise triggers the release of regulatory T cells, also known as Tregs, which enhance the muscles’ ability to use energy as fuel and improve endurance.

These same cells are also known to play a role in countering inflammati­on linked to a range of health problems – including cardiovasc­ular disease, cancer, diabetes and dementia.

Most previous studies on human performanc­e have focused on the role of hormones released during exercise and their effects on different organs, but this fresh research is one of the first to show how the immune system may play a role.

‘The immune system, and the Treg arm in particular, has a broad impact on tissue health,’ says Professor Diane Mathis of Harvard Medical School.

Although the findings relate to observatio­ns in lab mice, researcher­s say the study is an important step towards understand­ing molecular changes that occur during exercise that provide health benefits.

Exertion is known to temporaril­y damage muscles, causing a cascade of inflammato­ry responses. In the study, the team analysed cells taken from the hind-leg muscles of mice that ran on a treadmill just once as well as those that ran regularly. These were then compared with the muscles of sedentary mice.

The sets of both cells belonging to the mice that ran on treadmills showed classic signs of inflammati­on, and also had elevated levels of Tregs in their muscles – which lowered the exercise-induced inflammati­on. Neither change was observed in the sedentary mice.

However, further Treg benefits caused by exercise – such as improved muscle performanc­e – were seen only in the regular treadmill runners, which matches establishe­d findings in humans that regular activity is required to confer gains over time.

The Harvard experts also suggest that another role of Tregs is to counter the harmful effects of interferon­s – proteins released as part of the body’s inflammato­ry response.

‘With exercise, we have a natural way to boost the body’s immune responses to reduce inflammati­on,’ Prof Mathis adds. ‘It’s possible exercise is boosting Treg activity elsewhere in the body as well.’

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