Myokine IL-6 activity enhances post-exercise fatty acid accumulation in skeletal muscle but does not affect glycogen resynthesis.

Publication information:

Timothy M Kistner, Beckey Trinh, Karl Mfeketo, Gerrit van Hall, Bente K Pedersen, Daniel E Lieberman, and Helga Ellingsgaard. 2025. “Myokine IL-6 Activity Enhances Post-Exercise Fatty Acid Accumulation in Skeletal Muscle But Does Not Affect Glycogen Resynthesis”. Molecular Metabolism, 103, Pp. 102283. doi:10.1016/j.molmet.2025.102283

Abstract

BACKGROUND/PURPOSE: During exercise, myokine interleukin 6 (IL-6) plays a variety of metabolic roles including acting as a muscular energy sensor and liberating somatic energy stores. While the effects of IL-6 are relatively well-defined during exercise, its role in muscular metabolism during exercise recovery in humans has not been addressed.

METHODS: To test whether myokine IL-6 allocates fat and glucose towards muscle, we conducted a randomized double-blind trial with 30 men (Age: 25.2 ± 3 yrs. BMI: 23.0 ± 1.5 kg/m2) where participants exercised at a moderate intensity for 2 h and received either tocilizumab to block IL-6 activity, or placebo. Continuous infusions of isotopically labeled palmitate, glucose, and glycerol paired with blood, breath, and muscle samples were used to measure muscle-specific metabolism.

RESULTS: IL-6 blockade did not affect exercise performance, substrate utilization, or glucose, fatty acid and glycerol kinetics during exercise. During recovery, IL-6 blockade decreased the appearance of oral glucose and lowered the insulin response to a glucose drink. Despite this difference in glucose and insulin, the rate of post-exercise glycogen resynthesis before and after the ingestion of glucose was not altered between groups. Although IL-6 blockade did not affect lipolysis during exercise, it attenuated the accumulation of esterified oleate in muscle during recovery before the glucose drink was given. Furthermore, IL-6 blockade attenuated IL-1RA production in recovery but did not alter IL-10 secretion.

CONCLUSION: Together, these results imply that during recovery from moderate-intensity exercise, myokine IL-6 primarily regulates fatty acid metabolism within muscle and leaves glucose metabolism largely unaffected.

CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: Clinicaltrials.gov (NCT05349149).