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Have
Brain Fatigue? A bout of exercise may be the
cure
Newswise, September 20,
2011--Researchers have long known that
regular exercise increases the number of
organelles called mitochondria in muscle
cells. Since mitochondria are responsible
for generating energy, this numerical boost
is thought to underlie many of the positive
physical effects of exercise, such as
increased strength or endurance. Exercise
also has a number of positive mental
effects, such as relieving depression and
improving memory.
However, the mechanism
behind these mental effects has been
unclear. In a new study in mice, researchers
at the University of South Carolina have
discovered that regular exercise also
increases mitochondrial numbers in brain
cells, a potential cause for exercise’s
beneficial mental effects.
Their article is entitled
“Exercise Training Increases Mitochondrial
Biogenesis in the Brain.” It appears in the
Articles in PresS section of the American
Journal of Physiology – Regulatory,
Integrative, and Comparative Physiology,
published by the American Physiological
Society.
Methodology
The researchers assigned mice to either an
exercise group, which ran on an inclined
treadmill six days a week for an hour, or to
a sedentary group, which was exposed to the
same sounds and handling as the exercise
group but remained in their cages during the
exercise period. After eight weeks,
researchers examined brain and muscle tissue
from some of the mice in each group to test
for signs of increases in mitochondria.
Additionally, some of the mice from each
group performed a “run to fatigue” test to
assess their endurance after the eight-week
period.
Results
Confirming previous studies, the results
showed that mice in the exercise group had
increased mitochondria in their muscle
tissue compared to mice in the sedentary
group. However, the researchers also found
that the exercising mice also showed several
positive markers of mitochondria increase in
the brain, including a rise in the
expression of genes for proxisome
proliferator-activated receptor-g
coactivator 1-alpha, silent information
regulator T1, and citrate synthase, all
regulators for mitochondrial biogenesis; and
mitochondrial DNA. These results correlate
well with the animals’ increased fitness.
Overall, mice in the exercise group
increased their run to fatigue times from
about 74 minutes to about 126 minutes. No
change was seen for the sedentary mice.
Importance of the Findings
These findings suggest that exercise
training increases the number of
mitochondria in the brain much like it
increases mitochondria in muscles. The study
authors note that this increase in brain
mitochondria may play a role in boosting
exercise endurance by making the brain more
resistant to fatigue, which can affect
physical performance. They also suggest that
this boost in brain mitochondria could have
clinical implications for mental disorders,
making exercise a potential treatment for
psychiatric disorders, genetic disorders,
and neurodegenerative diseases.
“These findings could lead
to the enhancement of athletic performance
through reduced mental and physical fatigue,
as well as to the expanded use of exercise
as a therapeutic option to attenuate the
negative effects of aging, and the treatment
and/or prevention of neurological diseases,”
the authors say.
Study Team
The study was conducted by Jennifer L.
Steiner, E. Angela Murphy, Jamie L.
McClellan, Martin D. Carmichael, and J. Mark
Davis, all of the University of South
Carolina
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