Cold shock
proteins are stress proteins that are activated by cold exposure. They’ve been
reported in a wide range of organisms, from bacteria to amphibians to humans. A
major function of these proteins is to help organisms cope with cold stress and
adapt to changing environments.
Whether you are sitting in a hot sauna at 90 -100 degrees C or sitting in
an ice bath at 5 -10 degrees C, the body is being hit with an extremely
stressful situation that it is attempting to combat and preserve life through
various mental and physical responses.
As a coping mechanism and adaptive response, the body produces or releases
cold shock proteins. These cold shock proteins help us cope with the cold and
also adapt to the sudden environmental change – essentially to keep us alive.
Cold shock proteins have been studied and
recorded by scientists and have some amazing known and potential benefits.
There are a few key cold shock proteins that are quintessential to the cold
therapy practice.
Some key cold shock proteins identified and studied in humans are:
·
CARHSP1
·
Lin28
·
YB-1
·
RBM3
What Are The
Benefits of Cold Shock Proteins?
Cold shock proteins from cold water immersion provide some pretty
spectacular benefits for exercise recovery, reducing inflammation, wound
healing and potential benefits for cancer and preventing tumour growth.
The main benefits of cold shock proteins which make them a highly desirable
affect of a habituated cold therapy practice are: maintaining muscle mass,
neuroprotective effects, wound healing and
There is
evidence that cold shock proteins from taking an ice bath can help to reduce loss of muscle mass during
bouts of decreased physical exercise. This can be a game changer during periods
of injury or limited movement for athletes, in order to maintain muscle
mass.
“CIRP and RBM3 predominately respond to hypothermia in mammalian cells.
Specifically, RBM3 increases in response to hypothermia which leads to a
decrease in apoptosis which could prevent a decrease in skeletal muscle mass”.
Dr Rhonda
Patrick discusses the benefits of cold shock proteins on her podcast and
website FoundMyFiitness, where she
explains that they “promote cell survival, activates antioxidant enzymes and
may offer neuroprotective qualities”. The cold shock protein RBM3, which we
have discussed in our other article on the neuroprotective and neuroplasticity benefits of ice baths, have been
directly linked to neurogenesis, facilitating the regeneration of damaged
neurons. In this way, cold shock proteins may have exciting utility for
treatment of neurodegenerative issues like Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and
Traumatic Brain Injury.
The cold shock
protein, YB-1 offers benefits in promoting wound healing and may also hold
crucial information for cancer disease research. This same
study discusses the potential future in cold shock protein research, stating
“Beyond their diagnostic potential, we envision that therapeutic interventions
targeting cold shock proteins may reduce disease burden”, and that “that cold
shock proteins may regulate the formation of protein aggregates in
neurodegenerative diseases”.
Article:https://www.myritual.com.au/journal/cold-shock-proteins
Paper: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9518606/
Source: What Are Cold Shock Proteins? – Scents of Science (myfusimotors.com)
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