Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755, USA.
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755, USA.
Neuroscience. 2014 Jan 3;256:53-60. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2013.10.012. Epub 2013 Oct 22.
Exercising during pregnancy has been shown to improve spatial learning and short-term memory, as well as increase brain-derived neurotrophic factor mRNA levels and hippocampal cell survival in juvenile offspring. However, it remains unknown if these effects endure into adulthood. In addition, few studies have considered how maternal exercise can impact cognitive functions that do not rely on the hippocampus. To address these issues, the present study tested the effects of maternal exercise during pregnancy on object recognition memory, which relies on the perirhinal cortex (PER), in adult offspring. Pregnant rats were given access to a running wheel throughout gestation and the adult male offspring were subsequently tested in an object recognition memory task at three different time points, each spaced 2-weeks apart, beginning at 60 days of age. At each time point, offspring from exercising mothers were able to successfully discriminate between novel and familiar objects in that they spent more time exploring the novel object than the familiar object. The offspring of non-exercising mothers were not able to successfully discriminate between objects and spent an equal amount of time with both objects. A subset of rats was euthanized 1h after the final object recognition test to assess c-FOS expression in the PER. The offspring of exercising mothers had more c-FOS expression in the PER than the offspring of non-exercising mothers. By comparison, c-FOS levels in the adjacent auditory cortex did not differ between groups. These results indicate that maternal exercise during pregnancy can improve object recognition memory in adult male offspring and increase c-FOS expression in the PER; suggesting that exercise during the gestational period may enhance brain function of the offspring.
孕期锻炼已被证明可以改善空间学习和短期记忆,增加幼年后代脑中源性神经营养因子 mRNA 水平和海马细胞存活。然而,目前尚不清楚这些影响是否会持续到成年期。此外,很少有研究考虑过母体运动如何影响不依赖海马体的认知功能。为了解决这些问题,本研究测试了孕期母体运动对成年后代物体识别记忆的影响,物体识别记忆依赖于边缘皮层(PER)。怀孕的大鼠在整个孕期都可以使用跑步轮,随后,雄性成年后代在物体识别记忆任务中接受测试,该任务在三个不同的时间点进行,每个时间点相隔 2 周,从 60 天大开始。在每个时间点,来自锻炼母亲的后代能够成功区分新物体和熟悉物体,因为它们花更多的时间探索新物体而不是熟悉物体。非锻炼母亲的后代无法成功区分物体,并且在两个物体上花费相同的时间。在最后一次物体识别测试后 1 小时处死一组大鼠,以评估 PER 中的 c-FOS 表达。锻炼母亲的后代在 PER 中的 c-FOS 表达比非锻炼母亲的后代更多。相比之下,两组之间听觉皮层的 c-FOS 水平没有差异。这些结果表明,孕期母体运动可以改善成年雄性后代的物体识别记忆,并增加 PER 中的 c-FOS 表达;表明妊娠期运动可能增强后代的大脑功能。