4.7 Article

An exercise sweet spot reverses cognitive deficits of aging by growth-hormone-induced neurogenesis

期刊

ISCIENCE
卷 24, 期 11, 页码 -

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2021.103275

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资金

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council [GNT1067909, GNT1130141]
  2. Stafford Fox Medical Research Foundation
  3. Australian government

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The study demonstrates that appropriate exercise can improve learning ability in aged mice, but only when it occurs for a specific duration. The spike in growth hormone levels and increase in neurogenesis play a crucial role in mediating this effect.
Hippocampal function is critical for spatial and contextual learning, and its decline with age contributes to cognitive impairment. Exercise can improve hippocampal function, however, the amount of exercise and mechanisms mediating improvement remain largely unknown. Here, we show exercise reverses learning deficits in aged (24 months) female mice but only when it occurs for a specific duration, with longer or shorter periods proving ineffective. A spike in the levels of growth hormone (GH) and a corresponding increase in neurogenesis during this sweet spot mediate this effect because blocking GH receptor with a competitive antagonist or depleting newborn neurons abrogates the exercise-induced cognitive improvement. Moreover, raising GH levels with GH-releasing hormone agonist improved cognition in nonrunners. We show that GH stimulates neural precursors directly, indicating the link between raised GH and neurogenesis is the basis for the substantially improved learning in aged animals.

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