Iyalomhe Osigbemhe, Chen Yuanxiu, Allard Joanne, Ntekim Oyonumo, Johnson Sheree, Bond Vernon, Goerlitz David, Li James, Obisesan Thomas O
Division of Geriatrics, Department of Medicine, Howard University Hospital, 2041 Georgia Ave NW, Washington, DC 20060, USA.
Clinical Translational Science Center, Howard University Hospital, 2041 Georgia Ave NW, Washington, DC 20060, USA.
Exp Gerontol. 2015 Sep;69:159-69. doi: 10.1016/j.exger.2015.05.005. Epub 2015 May 15.
There is considerable support for the view that aerobic exercise may confer cognitive benefits to mild cognitively impaired elderly persons. However, the biological mechanisms mediating these effects are not entirely clear. As a preliminary step towards informing this gap in knowledge, we enrolled older adults confirmed to have mild cognitive impairment (MCI) in a 6-month exercise program. Male and female subjects were randomized into a 6-month program of either aerobic or stretch (control) exercise. Data collected from the first 10 completers, aerobic exercise (n=5) or stretch (control) exercise (n=5), were used to determine intervention-induced changes in the global gene expression profiles of the aerobic and stretch groups. Using microarray, we identified genes with altered expression (relative to baseline values) in response to the 6-month exercise intervention. Genes whose expression were altered by at least two-fold, and met the p-value cutoff of 0.01 were inputted into the Ingenuity Pathway Knowledge Base Library to generate gene-interaction networks. After a 6-month aerobic exercise-training, genes promoting inflammation became down-regulated, whereas genes having anti-inflammatory properties and those modulating immune function or promoting neuron survival and axon growth, became up-regulated (all fold change≥±2.0, p<0.01). These changes were not observed in the stretch group. Importantly, the differences in the expression profiles correlated with significant improvement in maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max) in the aerobic program as opposed to the stretch group. We conclude that three distinct cellular pathways may collectively influence the training effects of aerobic exercise in MCI subjects. We plan to confirm these effects using rt-PCR and correlate such changes with the cognitive phenotype.
有相当多的证据支持有氧运动可能对轻度认知障碍的老年人产生认知益处这一观点。然而,介导这些效应的生物学机制尚不完全清楚。作为填补这一知识空白的初步步骤,我们招募了被确诊患有轻度认知障碍(MCI)的老年人参加一个为期6个月的锻炼项目。男性和女性受试者被随机分为参加为期6个月的有氧运动或伸展(对照)运动项目。从最初的10名完成者(有氧运动组n = 5或伸展运动(对照组)n = 5)收集的数据用于确定有氧运动组和伸展运动组的整体基因表达谱中干预引起的变化。使用微阵列,我们鉴定了在6个月的运动干预后表达发生改变(相对于基线值)的基因。将表达改变至少两倍且满足p值截止值为0.01的基因输入到 Ingenuity 通路知识库文库中以生成基因相互作用网络。经过6个月的有氧运动训练后,促进炎症的基因下调,而具有抗炎特性以及调节免疫功能或促进神经元存活和轴突生长的基因上调(所有倍数变化≥±2.0,p < 0.01)。在伸展运动组中未观察到这些变化。重要的是,与伸展运动组相比,表达谱的差异与有氧运动项目中最大摄氧量(VO2max)的显著改善相关。我们得出结论,三种不同的细胞途径可能共同影响有氧运动对MCI受试者的训练效果。我们计划使用逆转录聚合酶链反应(rt-PCR)来确认这些效应,并将这些变化与认知表型相关联。