Photography often involves compromise. Often we want an aperture that yields sufficient depth of field, a shutter speed that doesn't result in unwanted motion blur, and an exposure high enough to yield no visible image noise.
In many situations, we cannot achieve all three of these goals, and we must compromise on one or more of them. If the camera is in a mode where it is allowed choices in how to compromise, then we can use set various limits to influence how the camera decides.
For instance, if limiting motion blur is important to us, we can set a minimum shutter speed. This tells the camera that when light is low, it should compromise by allowing a shallower depth of field (larger aperture) or more image noise (lower exposure, and a correspondingly higher ISO).
If limiting visible image noise is important, we can set a maximum ISO. This effectively tells the camera that we want to maintain at least a certain minimum exposure. In low light the camera will use compromise with a shallower depth of field (larger aperture) or allow more motion blur (longer shutter speed).
Now, if your personal preference is to maintain sufficient depth of field, and keep motion blur under control, then you may not want to set a maximum ISO value. If this is your preference, than you need to accept low exposures in low light situations.