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editorial
. 2015 Oct 9;1(1):3–4. doi: 10.3233/BPL-159001

Tracking Effects of Exercise on Neuronal Plasticity

Henriette van Praag a, Brian Christie b
Editors: Henriette van Praag, Brian Christie
PMCID: PMC5928568  PMID: 29765832

The inaugural issue of Brain Plasticity includes ten papers that focus on the effects of exercise on brain function in animal models. Exercise is a simple, low-cost intervention that promotes cognition and mood, protects against damage associated with neurodegeneration and may alleviate drug addiction in humans. The mechanisms underlying the beneficial effects of physical activity are the subject of intense investigation. For this Special Issue we have invited scientists working on basic research into the cellular, molecular and behavioral changes associated with running.We are grateful for their excellent and insightful contributions.

Several papers in this issue focus on the cellular mechanisms underlying beneficial effects of running on cognition and mood. The article by Sama Sleiman and Moses Chao describes the historical background and discovery of neurotrophic factors, their role (especially of BDNF) in synaptic plasticity and potential clinical implications of their modulation by exercise. The article also addresses how peripheral factors, such as ketones and myokines, may be implicated in the running-induced upregulation of BDNF [8]. The role of a specific myokine, irisin, a cleavage product derived from a muscle protein FNDC5 that is secreted into circulation, and its role in upregulation of brain BDNF levels by exercise is discussed in detail by Christiane Wrann [10]. In a comprehensive review, Simone Bolijn and Paul Lucassen describe how peripheral factors such as insulin-like growth factor, adiponectin and AMP-kinasethat may regulate exercise-induced hippocampal cell genesis [1]. Indeed, a focus on theeffects of exercise on adult neurogenesis is the subject of several papers in this issue. Stefano Farioli-Vecchioli and Felice Tirone review the cell-cycle kinetics in both neurogenic niches the dentate gyrus and subventricular zone, and discuss how running-dependent enhancement of proliferation may depend on changes in cell cycle length in select types of neural progenitor cells [3].

Two research reports in this issue address effects of running on behavior. Justin Rhodes and his colleagues test a hybrid transgenic mouse model with reduced neurogenesis on hippocampus-dependent and non-dependent tasks and the response of this strain to exercise [4]. Furthermore, Joseph Bischofberger and co-workers provide novel evidence in their research report for running-induced enhanced pattern separation using a new behavioral approach with highly similar novel and familiar objects that does not cause stress or requires food or water deprivation of the animals, thereby highlighting the effects of exercise on cognition. They also show that running increases the dendritic outgrowth into the outer molecular layer and the number of young, double cortin-positive granule cells in the dorsal rather than in the ventral dentate gyrus [2].

The subject of another set of papers in this Special Issue is the effects of exercise on neurodegenerative disease, stress and drug addiction. Brian Christie and his colleagues [6] give a historical perspective on hippocampal structure, function and plasticity, followed by an overview of effects of exercise on the hippocampus under normal and disease conditions including Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, Traumatic brain injury, Stroke and neurodegenerative diseases (Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and Huntington’s Disease). Giselle Petzinger and her colleagues contribute a focused review on the impact of exercise on neuroplasticity in animal models of Parkinson’s disease. Modulation of dopaminergic and glutamatergic transmission, synaptogenesis and cerebral blood flow in the basal ganglia, prefrontal cortex and cerebellumby exercise are discussed [7]. Hideaki Soya and his colleagues focus on the dosing of exercise and provide evidence that mild exercise is the most beneficial for brain function [5]. Another aspect of the effects of exercise is highlighted by Chitra Mandyam and her colleagues in a comprehensive review on methamphetamine addiction and associated neurotoxicity.

REFERENCES

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