4.5 Article

Autophagy regulates the release of exercise factors and their beneficial effects on spatial memory recall

期刊

HELIYON
卷 9, 期 4, 页码 -

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e14705

关键词

Exercise; Beta-hydroxybutyrate; Aging; Learning; Memory; Autophagy; BDNF

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Exercise enhances learning and memory recall and counteracts cognitive decline associated with aging. The positive effects of exercise are mediated by circulatory factors, specifically Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF) signaling in the hippocampus. Identifying the mechanisms behind the release of these factors and their effects on hippocampal Bdnf expression will help harness the therapeutic potential of exercise.
Exercise promotes learning and memory recall as well as rescues cognitive decline associated with aging. The positive effects of exercise are mediated by circulatory factors that predominantly increase Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF) signaling in the hippocampus. Identifying the pathways that regulate the release of the circulatory factors by various tissues during exercise and that mediate hippocampal Mus musculus Bdnf expression will allow us to harness the therapeutic potential of exercise. Here, we report that two weeks of voluntary exercise in male mice activates autophagy in the hippocampus by increasing LC3B protein levels (p = 0.0425) and that auto-phagy is necessary for exercise-induced spatial learning and memory retention (p < 0.001; ex-ercise + autophagy inhibitor chloroquine CQ versus exercise). We place autophagy downstream of hippocampal BDNF signaling and identify a positive feedback activation between the path-ways. We also assess whether the modulation of autophagy outside the nervous system is involved in mediating exercise's effect on learning and memory recall. Indeed, plasma collected from young exercise mice promote spatial learning (p = 0.0446; exercise versus sedentary plasma) and memory retention in aged inactive mice (p = 0.0303; exercise versus sedentary plasma), whereas plasma collected from young exercise mice that received the autophagy inhibitor chloroquine diphosphate failed to do so. We show that the release of exercise factors that reverse the symp-toms of aging into the circulation is dependent on the activation of autophagy in young animals. Indeed, we show that the release of the exercise factor, beta-hydroxybutyrate (DBHB), into the circulation, is autophagy-dependent and that DBHB promotes spatial learning and memory for-mation (p = 0.0005) by inducing hippocampal autophagy (p = 0.0479). These results implicate autophagy in peripheral tissues and in the hippocampus in mediating the effects of exercise on learning and memory recall and identify DBHB as a candidate endogenous exercise factor whose release and positive effects are autophagy-dependent.

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