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Page 1: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of

cognition, mood and motor control:

Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman

Director, Institute of Brain Aging

University of California, Irivne

Page 2: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Outline

• Part I. Exercise regulates learning, neurogenesis and angiogenesis via growth factor cascades

• Part II. Exercise improves learning and reduces β-amyloid accumulation and inflammation in Alzheimer mouse models

• Part III. Environmental enrichment antioxidant diet improve learning in aged canines

Page 3: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Exercise induces growth factor cascades and regulates peripheral risk factors for brain dysfunction

Page 4: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

BDNF (Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor) is necessary for learning:

Page 5: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

BDNF – Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor, “Brain Fertilizer”

• Necessary for learning and long term synaptic change

• Stimulates synaptic growth and neurogenesis• Linked to “depression” in rodents• Protects neurons from injury including those in

motor systems

How to get more?• Exercise?

Page 6: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Is BDNF increased with exercise in brain?

Page 7: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Exercise increases BDNF mRNAHIPPOCAMPUS:

Rats: 1 week exercise (male sprague-dawley, 3 months)

Berchtold et al., 2002

Page 8: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

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Exercise Enhances Learning in the Morris Water Maze

Page 9: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Blocking BDNF action (anti-TrkB) during the exercise period on memory retention using the probe trial on the Morris Water Maze task

(Vaynman, et al., 2004)

Page 10: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Take home:

• Thus exercise improves the state of readiness of learning, faster and lower threshold, including theta long term potentiation, a synaptic analogue of learning.

Page 11: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Practical Questions

• How long lasting is the increase in BDNF after stopping exercise? 2wks

• How frequent is necessary? 3-4X/wk

• Can the increase be recovered rapidly if exercise is stopped for a period? Yes, if within 2wks

Page 12: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Other targets of exercise

Neurogenesis, Angiogenesis

Page 13: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Neurogenesis

• Occurs in select brain regions, e.g., hippocampal dentate gyrus

• Correlates with improved learning; new cells have a low threshold for synaptic transmission

• A mechanism in antidepressant action • Linked to IGF-1 and BDNF• Increases with running and is sustained with age

but at reduced levels (van Praag, 2005; Kronenberg, 2005)

Page 14: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

(van Praag, 2005)

Neurogenesis in the young and aged dentate gyrus.

Page 15: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

New neurons?

• Exercise can increase brain vessels and the generation of new neurons in brain.

• Humans?

Page 16: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Pereira et al., 2007

Exercise selectively increases dentate gyrus cerebral blood volume in mice.

Page 17: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Pereira et al., 2007

Exercise-induced increases cerebral blood volume and correlates with neurogenesis in mouse

hippocampus

Page 18: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Pereira et al., 2007

Exercise increases cerebral blood volume (CBV) in human hippocampus. Exercise had a selective effect on dentate gyrus CBV. Before exercise (open bars) and after exercise (filled bars).

Page 19: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Growth factor cascades regulate learning, neurogenesis, and angiogenesis (Cotman,2007, Trends in

NS).

Page 20: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Effects of exercise on normal aging

Behavior Neuroanatomy Cellular/molecular References

Human Improves learning & memory, slows cognitive decline, risk for dementia

Reduces brain atrophy, prevents decline in cerebral blood flow, increases bloodflow (neurogenesis?)

Needs investigation Rogers et al. 1990; Hill, et al. 1993; Laurin et al. 2001; Yaff e et al. 2001; Colcombe et al. 2003; Weuve et al. 2004; Rovio et al. 2005; Colcombe et al. 2006; Larson et al. 2006; Pereira et al., 2007

Animal Improves learning & memory, slows cognitive decline

Slows decline in neurogenesis, lowers threshold for LTP induction, increases angiogenesis

BDNF, prevents decline in precursor cell activity in dentate gyrus

Farmer et al. 2004; Adlard et al. 2005; van Praag et al. 2005; Ding et al. 2006; Kronenberg et al. 2006

Page 21: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Part II: Is exercise an effective intervention in Alzheimer’s disease

transgenic mouse models ?

• Will voluntary running improve learning and memory?

• Reduce β-amyloid in the brain?

• Stimulate neurogenesis?

Page 22: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Animal model

• Widespread plaque deposition, including the hippocampus andcortex

Chishti et al., JBC 276: 21562-21570, 2001.

Page 23: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Voluntary Exercise Paradigm (Adlard, etal., 2005)

• Utilized TgCRND8 mouse model

• Voluntary access to running wheels (animals run ~3 miles/day)

• Short-term running- start at 6 weeks of age- sacrifice four weeks later

• Long-term running- start at 6 weeks of age- sacrifice 5 months later

Page 24: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Exercise improves the performance of TgCRND8 animals in the Morris water maze

Ave

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Page 25: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Long-term running reduces ß-amyloid load in TgCRND8 animals

(by immunohistochemistry)

Page 26: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

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Long-term running reduces ß-amyloid in TgCRND8 animals (by ELISA)

Page 27: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Long-term running enhances neurogenesis in TgCRND8 animals

Page 28: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Can exercise improve learning in late stage AD?

???????????

Page 29: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

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Page 30: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Pre- fibrilar β-amyloid is decreased by 3 wks running in 18m old

Tg2576 miceC

TGrun0%

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Page 31: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Inflammation

• Is a common component of the metabolic syndrome

• IL-1 and TNF impair insulin/IGF-1 signaling (insulin resistance) and increase the risk for progression (various refs)

• IL-1 impairs BDNF and neurotrophin signaling (“neurotrophin resistance”) (Tong, 2007)

• Can exercise reduce inflammation????

Page 32: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

IL-1IL-1 0

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Exercise reverses the effects of Exercise reverses the effects of “AD” on inflammatory system“AD” on inflammatory system

Pro-inflammatory: BAD Anti-inflammatory: GOOD

Page 33: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Inflammation

• Impairs insulin/IGF-1 signaling, e.g., IL-1β, TGFα (insulin resistance)

• Impairs BDNF signaling, e.g., IL-1β (neurotrophin resistance)

• Exercise thus acts via growth factor cascades at multiple levels. Induction and relief from suppression.

Page 34: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

BDNF signal transduction: IL-1β impairs IRS coupling similar to its effect on IGF-1

Page 35: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

BDNF

• BDNF and mood (Martinowich, etal, Nature Neuroscience, 2007)

• Hipocampal neurogenesis in depression (Sahay and Hen, Nature Neuroscience 2007)

Page 36: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Part III: Environmental enrichment/exercise and Diet: multi-factorial interventions

• Supplements/Nutrients

• Some dietary factors may regulate brain health and cognitive performance

• Interact with environmental enrichment and exercise

• Can control the metabolic syndrome

Page 37: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Can antioxidants and/or Exercise/Environmental Enrichment

Delay the Development of Age Dependent Cognitive Dysfunction and Neuropathology in Canines?

Page 38: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Spatial Memory and Treatment

Year of Study

Year 1 Year 2 Year 3

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Page 39: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Cognition, Mood and Motor control?

• Growth factor cascades and their regulation underlie aspects of enhancing brain function and structure and protecting from pathology (Cotman, 2007, Trends in NS)

• Growth factor signaling can be impaired by inflammation

• Growth factor cascades may be a common denominator for cognitive impairment, depression and some aspects of motor control??

• Exercise accesses these mechanisms

Page 40: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Acknowledgments

• Nicole Berchtold

• Liz Head

• Paul Adlard

• Liqi Tong

• Robert Balazs

• Kate Nicole

Page 41: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Canine Antioxidant Diet

• Antioxidants• dl-alpha tocopherol acetate-

1050 ppm (20 mg/kg - 800 IU

• Stay-C (ascorbyl monophosphate)-100 ppm

• Spinach, carrot granules, tomato pomace, citrus pulp, grape pomace - 1% each in exchange for corn (Increased ORAC by 50%)

Mitochondrial cofactors

• dl-Lipoic acid - 135 ppm (2.7 mg/kg)

• l-carnitine,Acetyl-car-300 ppm (6 mg/kg)

ROS

Page 42: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Enrichment Protocol

• Play toys• Kennelmate• 3x20 min walks• Additional cognitive

experience

Controls

Page 43: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

6 months

Page 44: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Effect of diet on oddity discrimination in aged beagles

Oddity task

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Effect of diet on oddity discrimination in aged beagles

Page 45: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Is the intervention able to “reverse” age related

cognitive dysfunction?

Page 46: Growth Factor (GF) Cascades and exercise and the regulation of cognition, mood and motor control: Are GFs a common mechanism? Carl W. Cotman Director,

Summary

• Part I: Exercise access brain learning mechanisms and regulates growth factors

• Part II: Exercise can delay onset of age-related pathology and improve learning even once pathology has evolved

• Part III: Exercise and environmental enrichment with an antioxidant diet can improve learning