4.7 Article

Exercise improves choroid plexus epithelial cells metabolism to prevent glial cell-associated neurodegeneration

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2022.1010785

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease; astrocytes; brain energy metabolism; choroid plexus epithelial cells; exercise; multicomics; pharmacology

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China
  2. Medical and Health Science and Technology Development Project of Shandong Province [82102634, 81972062, 81772419]
  3. Key Clinical Medicine Center of Shanghai [2018WS147]
  4. Sanming Project of Medicine in Shenzhen [2017ZZ01006]
  5. Development Project of Shanghai Peak Disciplines-Integrative Medicine [SZSM201612078]
  6. Shanghai Committee of Science and Technology [20180101]
  7. Shandong Medical and Health Technology Development Fund [19441901600]
  8. Shandong Province Traditional Chinese Medicine Science and Technology Project [202103070325]
  9. Nursery Project of the Affiliated Tai'an City Central Hospital of Qingdao University [M-2022216]
  10. Health Shanghai Initiative Special Fund (Medical-Sports Integration, Creating a New Model of Exercise for Health) [2022MPM06]
  11. [JKSHZX-2022-02]

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Recent studies have shown that physical activities can prevent aging-related neurodegeneration by improving the metabolic pathway activity of glial cells in the central nervous system.
Recent studies have shown that physical activities can prevent aging-related neurodegeneration. Exercise improves the metabolic landscape of the body. However, the role of these differential metabolites in preventing neurovascular unit degeneration (NVU) is still unclear. Here, we performed single-cell analysis of brain tissue from young and old mice. Normalized mutual information (NMI) was used to measure heterogeneity between each pair of cells using the non-negative Matrix Factorization (NMF) method. Astrocytes and choroid plexus epithelial cells (CPC), two types of CNS glial cells, differed significantly in heterogeneity depending on their aging status and intercellular interactions. The MetaboAnalyst 5.0 database and the scMetabolism package were used to analyze and calculate the differential metabolic pathways associated with aging in the CPC. These mRNAs and corresponding proteins were involved in the metabolites (R)-3-Hydroxybutyric acid, 2-Hydroxyglutarate, 2-Ketobutyric acid, 3-Hydroxyanthranilic acid, Fumaric acid, L-Leucine, and Oxidized glutathione pathways in CPC. Our results showed that CPC age heterogeneity-associated proteins (ECHS1, GSTT1, HSD17B10, LDHA, and LDHB) might be directly targeted by the metabolite of oxidized glutathione (GSSG). Further molecular dynamics and free-energy simulations confirmed the insight into GSSG's targeting function and free-energy barrier on these CPC age heterogeneity-associated proteins. By inhibiting these proteins in CPC, GSSG inhibits brain energy metabolism, whereas exercise improves the metabolic pathway activity of CPC in NVU by regulating GSSG homeostasis. In order to develop drugs targeting neurodegenerative diseases, further studies are needed to understand how physical exercise enhances NVU function and metabolism by modulating CPC-glial cell interactions.

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