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Beat Alzheimer's With Exercise
Published online: 2 December 2005;
Study shows how exertion keeps brain cells healthy in mice.
Charlotte Schubert
Running could keep the brain as well as the body healthy.
Exercise helps to flush a
toxic molecule from the brain and causes a beneficial one to move in
and protect nerve cells, research on mice shows. The discovery might
help to explain why staying fit and keeping mentally active seem to
fend off Alzheimer's disease in humans.
"Our experiments support
the idea that exercise is a good approach to all types of problems in
the brain and that a sedentary lifestyle is a risk factor," says
Ignacio Torres-Aleman, who led the study at the Cajal Institute in
Madrid.
Torres-Aleman and his
colleagues were intrigued by previous studies showing that exercise
slows mental decline in mice engineered to mimic Alzheimer's disease.
They set out to discover the reason.
They found that exercise
doubled the levels of a protein that helps to flush molecules thought
to underlie Alzheimer's disease out of the mice's brains and into their
blood. The protein, called megalin, ejects a potentially destructive
protein called amyloid-beta. In Alzheimer's patients, amyloid-beta
accumulates in clumps throughout the brain.
"Our experiments support
the idea that exercise is a good approach to all types of problems in
the brain," said Ignacio Torres-Aleman of the Cajal Institute in Madrid
Megalin also binds to a
beneficial molecule in the blood, called insulin-like growth factor,
and transports it to the brain. This growth factor is perhaps best
known for bulking up muscles after exercise, but it also helps to keep
nerve cells healthy.
Brain boost
To reveal the tricks of
megalin, the researchers manipulated levels of the protein in the brain
of mice with Alzheimer's-like disease. Artificially boosting megalin
partly improved mental performance, as measured in a maze test.
Levels of megalin decline
with age in normal mice. The researchers suggest that this hints at a
molecular link between ageing and neurodegenerative disease.
The findings appear in the
Journal of Neuroscience. But whether they will hold true remains to be
seen. Paul Adlard, a neuroscientist at the University of California,
Irvine, has looked at the brains of mice in a different model of
Alzheimer's disease. His data, although only preliminary, suggest that
exercise does not boost levels of the protective insulin-like growth
factor.
Adlard says that the findings of Torres-Aleman and his colleagues are "tantalizing", but that more study is needed.
Bright future
Others are more optimistic.
"It's a new idea," says Mark Mattson, a researcher at the National
Institute on Aging in Baltimore, Maryland. The findings, he says, open
the door to developing drugs that could boost levels of the megalin
shuttle and help keep the brain healthy.
"It's initial data but I think it has potential to be very relevant to people," he adds.
Mattson notes that the link
between exercise and brain health is still not certain in humans,
although the evidence is mounting up. Other research has found that
staying mentally agile or even maintaining a slim physique may help to
protect against Alzheimer's and other brain disorders.
1. CarroE., et al. The Journal of Neuroscience, 25. 10884 - 10893 (2005).
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