Exercise pumps up your muscles — but it might also be pumping up your neurons. According to a study published today in Neuron, repeated exercise sessions on a treadmill strengthen the wiring in a mouse’s brain, making certain neurons quicker to activate. This ‘rewiring’ was essential for mice in the study to gradually improve their running endurance.
Betley and his colleagues[...] decided to focus on the ventromedial hypothalamus, a brain region that regulates appetite and blood sugar. The team then zeroed in on a group of neurons in that region that produce a protein called steroidogenic factor 1 (SF1), which is known to play a part in regulating metabolism. A previous study found that the deletion of the gene that codes for SF1 impairs endurance in mice.
Betley’s team monitored the activity of SF1 neurons in mice running on a treadmill and found that these cells were indeed activated by exercise. Interestingly, one group of SF1 neurons became active only after exercise sessions ended. After several training sessions, the number of neurons that were activated post-run, as well as the magnitude of their activation, increased.
When the researchers examined brain slices from mice that had trained consistently over three weeks, they saw changes in the SF1 neurons’ electrical properties compared with mice that had not repeatedly exercised. These changes indicated that the neurons in the trained mice had become easier to activate. They also found that repeated exercise doubled the number of synapses — connections between the neurons — that were ‘excitatory’, or primed to fire off an electrical signal.
Finally, the authors used optogenetics — a technique that can activate or inhibit genetically engineered neurons with light — to ‘switch off’ SF1 neurons in the mice after they exercised. When these neurons were turned off, the mice didn’t improve their running performance over time, becoming exhausted more quickly than mice in which SF1 neurons were not switched off.
The research article itself (open access): Kindel et al.. Exercise-induced activation of ventromedial hypothalamic steroidogenic factor-1 neurons mediates improvements in endurance. Neuron. URL link. The graphical abstract does a very good job of explaining the research