Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Colorado Boulder, CO, USA.
Front Physiol. 2013 Nov 25;4:341. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2013.00341. eCollection 2013.
Accumulating evidence indicates that regular physical exercise benefits health in part by counteracting some of the negative physiological impacts of stress. While some studies identified reductions in some measures of acute stress responses with prior exercise, limited data were available concerning effects on cardiovascular function, and reported effects on hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) axis responses were largely inconsistent. Given that exposure to repeated or prolonged stress is strongly implicated in the precipitation and exacerbation of illness, we proposed the novel hypothesis that physical exercise might facilitate adaptation to repeated stress, and subsequently demonstrated significant enhancement of both HPA axis (glucocorticoid) and cardiovascular (tachycardia) response habituation to repeated noise stress in rats with long-term access to running wheels compared to sedentary controls. Stress habituation has been attributed to modifications of brain circuits, but the specific sites of adaptation and the molecular changes driving its expression remain unclear. Here, in situ hybridization histochemistry was used to examine regulation of select stress-associated signaling systems in brain regions representing likely candidates to underlie exercise-enhanced stress habituation. Analyzed brains were collected from active (6 weeks of wheel running) and sedentary rats following control, acute, or repeated noise exposures that induced a significantly faster rate of glucocorticoid response habituation in active animals but preserved acute noise responsiveness. Nearly identical experimental manipulations also induce a faster rate of cardiovascular response habituation in exercised, repeatedly stressed rats. The observed regulation of the corticotropin-releasing factor and brain-derived neurotrophic factor systems across several brain regions suggests widespread effects of voluntary exercise on central functions and related adaptations to stress across multiple response modalities.
越来越多的证据表明,有规律的体育锻炼有益于健康,部分原因是它可以抵消压力对一些生理的负面影响。虽然一些研究发现,预先进行运动可以降低一些急性应激反应的测量值,但关于对心血管功能的影响的数据有限,而且报告的对下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺皮质轴(HPA)反应的影响在很大程度上不一致。鉴于反复或长期暴露于应激强烈暗示着疾病的发生和恶化,我们提出了一个新的假设,即体育锻炼可能有助于适应反复的应激,随后我们证明了在长期接触跑步轮的大鼠中,与久坐对照组相比,HPA 轴(糖皮质激素)和心血管(心动过速)对重复噪声应激的反应习惯化有显著增强。应激习惯化归因于大脑回路的改变,但适应的具体部位和驱动其表达的分子变化仍不清楚。在这里,我们使用原位杂交组织化学技术研究了在大脑区域中选择的与应激相关的信号系统的调节,这些大脑区域可能是导致运动增强应激习惯化的基础。从活跃(6 周的转轮运动)和久坐大鼠中收集分析的大脑,这些大鼠在对照、急性或重复噪声暴露后,急性噪声反应保持不变,但糖皮质激素反应习惯化的速度明显加快。几乎相同的实验操作也会导致锻炼后、反复应激的大鼠心血管反应习惯化的速度加快。在多个大脑区域中观察到的促肾上腺皮质激素释放因子和脑源性神经营养因子系统的调节表明,自愿运动对中央功能有广泛的影响,以及对多种反应模式的应激相关适应。