PXD064353 is an
original dataset announced via ProteomeXchange.
Dataset Summary
| Title | Histamine mediates food intake, but not muscle adaptations, following 10 weeks of resistance training in humans |
| Description | Histamine receptor antagonists, commonly used to treat allergies, block histamine signalling and have been shown to impair acute and chronic adaptations to high-intensity and endurance-type exercise. Since it remains unclear whether this is a universal mechanism of muscle adaptation, this study investigated the effect of histamine receptor blockade on resistance training adaptations. Eighteen men performed 10 weeks of resistance training with either a placebo (n=9) or H1 receptor antihistamine (n=9, 180mg fexofenadine) intake before each training session. Outcomes assessed before and after the intervention included maximal strength (1RM), muscle volume (MRI), fat mass (skinfolds), fat free mass, whole-body glucose tolerance (OGTT), vascular function, dietary intake (self-reported food diaries) and muscle proteome remodelling. Both the placebo and antihistamine groups showed similar increases in muscle volume (+7% and +8%) and maximal strength (+14% and +20%) and reductions in diastolic blood pressure (-6 and -5 mmHg), total glucose level (-24% and -10%) and total insulin level (-10% and -9%) during the OGTT. Unexpectedly, the blockade group gained fat mass (+0.6 kg), while the placebo group did not (-0.3 kg), which could be related to increased dietary carbohydrate intake in the blockade, but not the placebo group (+29% vs -7%). In conclusion, histamine blockade did not impair resistance training-induced adaptations, suggesting that intercellular H1-histaminergic crosstalk is not a universal mechanism across training modalities. However, antihistamine intake led to increased habitual food intake and fat mass following 10 weeks of resistance training, possibly linked to a role of histamine in appetite regulation. |
| HostingRepository | PRIDE |
| AnnounceDate | 2026-03-04 |
| AnnouncementXML | Submission_2026-03-04_12:49:41.445.xml |
| DigitalObjectIdentifier | |
| ReviewLevel | Peer-reviewed dataset |
| DatasetOrigin | Original dataset |
| RepositorySupport | Unsupported dataset by repository |
| PrimarySubmitter | Roger Moreno Justicia |
| SpeciesList | scientific name: Homo sapiens (Human); NCBI TaxID: NEWT:9606; |
| ModificationList | No PTMs are included in the dataset |
| Instrument | timsTOF SCP |
Dataset History
| Revision | Datetime | Status | ChangeLog Entry |
| 0 | 2025-05-28 00:22:58 | ID requested | |
| ⏵ 1 | 2026-03-04 12:49:42 | announced | |
Publication List
| 10.1113/jp289240; |
| Van de Loock A, Vandecauter J, Ullrich M, Lievens E, Schro, é H, Moreno-Justicia R, Weyns A, Van Thienen R, Calders P, Deshmukh AS, Van der Stede T, Derave W, weeks of resistance training in humans. J Physiol, ():(2025) [pubmed] |
Keyword List
| submitter keyword: fat mass,resistance training, food intake, muscle adaptations, H1 antihistamines, histamine |
Contact List
| Atul Deshmukh |
| contact affiliation | Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Basic Metabolic Research, University of Copenhagen |
| contact email | atul.deshmukh@sund.ku.dk |
| lab head | |
| Roger Moreno Justicia |
| contact affiliation | Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Basic Metabolic Research |
| contact email | roger.moreno.justicia@sund.ku.dk |
| dataset submitter | |
Full Dataset Link List
Dataset FTP location
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| PRIDE project URI |
Repository Record List
[ + ]
[ - ]
- PRIDE
- PXD064353
- Label: PRIDE project
- Name: Histamine mediates food intake, but not muscle adaptations, following 10 weeks of resistance training in humans