4.5 Article

Insulin blood-brain barrier transport and interactions are greater following exercise in mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 132, Issue 3, Pages 824-834

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00866.2021

Keywords

blood-brain barrier; exercise; insulin; pharmacokinetics

Funding

  1. Brown Foundation
  2. National Institute of Health [P30 DK017047-44, P30 AG066509, RF1AG059088]
  3. Veterans Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System Research and Development

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Exercise enhances insulin blood-brain barrier transport, improving cognition independent of changes in serum factors.
Exercise has multiple beneficial effects including improving peripheral insulin sensitivity, improving central function such as memory, and restoring a dysregulated blood-brain barrier (BBB). Central nervous system (CNS) insulin resistance is a common feature of cognitive impairment, including Alzheimer's disease. Delivery of insulin to the brain can improve memory. Endogenous insulin must cross the BBB to directly act within the CNS and this transport system can be affected by various physiological states and serum factors. Therefore, the current study sought to investigate whether exercise could enhance insulin BBB transport as a mechanism for the underlying benefits of exercise on cognition. We investigated radioactive insulin BBB pharmacokinetics following an acute bout of exercise in young, male and female CD-1 mice. In addition, we investigated changes in serum levels of substrates that are known to affect insulin BBB transport. Finally, we measured the basal level of a downstream protein involved in insulin receptor signaling in various brain regions as well as muscle. We found insulin BBB transport in males was greater following exercise, and in males and females to both enhance the level of insulin vascular binding and alter CNS insulin receptor signaling, independent of changes in serum factors known to alter insulin BBB transport.

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