Hippocampal BDNF mediates the efficacy of exercise on synaptic plasticity and cognition
University of California, Los Angeles
Abstract
We found that a short exercise period enhanced cognitive function on the Morris water maze (MWM), such that exercised animals were significantly better than sedentary controls at learning and recalling the location of the platform. The finding that exercise increased brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), a molecule important for synaptic plasticity and learning and memory, impelled us to examine whether a BDNF-mediated mechanism subserves the capacity of exercise to improve hippocampal-dependent learning. A specific immunoadhesin chimera (TrkB-IgG), that mimics the BDNF receptor, TrkB, to selectively bind BDNF molecules, was used to block BDNF in the hippocampus during a 1-week voluntary exercise period.…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 8.28
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 70
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- CREB
- Tropomyosin receptor kinase B
- Brain-derived neurotrophic factor
- Neurotrophic factors
- Synapsin I
- Hippocampal formation
- Morris water navigation task
- Neuroscience