Beneficial effects of exercise in a transgenic mouse model of Alzheimer's disease-like Tau pathology

Abstract Tau pathology is encountered in many neurodegenerative disorders known as tauopathies, including Alzheimer's disease. Physical activity is a lifestyle factor affecting processes crucial for memory and synaptic plasticity. Whether long-term voluntary exercise has an impact on Tau pathol...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neurobiology of disease 2011-08, Vol.43 (2), p.486-494
Hauptverfasser: Belarbi, Karim, Burnouf, Sylvie, Fernandez-Gomez, Francisco-Jose, Laurent, Cyril, Lestavel, Sophie, Figeac, Martin, Sultan, Audrey, Troquier, Laetitia, Leboucher, Antoine, Caillierez, Raphaëlle, Grosjean, Marie-Eve, Demeyer, Dominique, Obriot, Hélène, Brion, Ingrid, Barbot, Bérangère, Galas, Marie-Christine, Staels, Bart, Humez, Sandrine, Sergeant, Nicolas, Schraen-Maschke, Susanna, Muhr-Tailleux, Anne, Hamdane, Malika, Buée, Luc, Blum, David
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Tau pathology is encountered in many neurodegenerative disorders known as tauopathies, including Alzheimer's disease. Physical activity is a lifestyle factor affecting processes crucial for memory and synaptic plasticity. Whether long-term voluntary exercise has an impact on Tau pathology and its pathophysiological consequences is currently unknown. To address this question, we investigated the effects of long-term voluntary exercise in the THY-Tau22 transgenic model of Alzheimer's disease-like Tau pathology, characterized by the progressive development of Tau pathology, cholinergic alterations and subsequent memory impairments. Three-month-old THY-Tau22 mice and wild-type littermates were assigned to standard housing or housing supplemented with a running wheel. After 9 months of exercise, mice were evaluated for memory performance and examined for hippocampal Tau pathology, cholinergic defects, inflammation and genes related to cholesterol metabolism. Exercise prevented memory alterations in THY-Tau22 mice. This was accompanied by a decrease in hippocampal Tau pathology and a prevention of the loss of expression of choline acetyltransferase within the medial septum. Whereas the expression of most cholesterol-related genes remained unchanged in the hippocampus of running THY-Tau22 mice, we observed a significant upregulation in mRNA levels of NPC1 and NPC2, genes involved in cholesterol trafficking from the lysosomes. Our data support the view that long-term voluntary physical exercise is an effective strategy capable of mitigating Tau pathology and its pathophysiological consequences.
ISSN:0969-9961
1095-953X
DOI:10.1016/j.nbd.2011.04.022