Department of Neurology, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, 04103 Leipzig, Germany,
Faculty of Human Sciences, Institute III, Department of Sport Science, Otto von Guericke University, 39104 Magdeburg, Germany.
J Neurosci. 2020 Mar 18;40(12):2416-2429. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2310-19.2020. Epub 2020 Feb 10.
Cardiovascular exercise (CE) is a promising intervention strategy to facilitate cognition and motor learning in healthy and diseased populations of all ages. CE elevates humoral parameters, such as growth factors, and stimulates brain changes potentially relevant for learning and behavioral adaptations. However, the causal relationship between CE-induced brain changes and human's ability to learn remains unclear. We tested the hypothesis that CE elicits a positive effect on learning via alterations in brain structure (morphological changes of gray and white matter) and function (functional connectivity and cerebral blood flow in resting state). We conducted a randomized controlled trial with healthy male and female human participants to compare the effects of a 2 week CE intervention against a non-CE control group on subsequent learning of a challenging new motor task (dynamic balancing; DBT) over 6 consecutive weeks. We used multimodal neuroimaging [T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), diffusion-weighted MRI, perfusion-weighted MRI, and resting state functional MRI] to investigate the neural mechanisms mediating between CE and learning. As expected, subjects receiving CE subsequently learned the DBT at a higher rate. Using a modified nonparametric combination approach along with multiple mediator analysis, we show that this learning boost was conveyed by CE-induced increases in cerebral blood flow in frontal brain regions and changes in white matter microstructure in frontotemporal fiber tracts. Our study revealed neural mechanisms for the CE-learning link within the brain, probably allowing for a higher flexibility to adapt to highly novel environmental stimuli, such as learning a complex task. It is established that cardiovascular exercise (CE) is an effective approach to promote learning and memory, yet little is known about the underlying neural transfer mechanisms through which CE acts on learning. We provide evidence that CE facilitates learning in human participants via plasticity in prefrontal white matter tracts and a colocalized increase in cerebral blood flow. Our findings are among the first to demonstrate a transfer potential of experience-induced brain plasticity. In addition to practical implications for health professionals and coaches, our work paves the way for future studies investigating effects of CE in patients suffering from prefrontal hypoperfusion or white matter diseases.
心血管运动(CE)是一种有前途的干预策略,可以促进所有年龄段健康和患病人群的认知和运动学习。CE 会提高体液参数,如生长因子,并刺激大脑变化,这些变化可能与学习和行为适应有关。然而,CE 引起的大脑变化与人类学习能力之间的因果关系尚不清楚。我们假设 CE 通过改变大脑结构(灰质和白质的形态变化)和功能(静息状态下的功能连接和脑血流)对学习产生积极影响。我们进行了一项随机对照试验,比较了健康的男性和女性参与者接受 2 周 CE 干预与非 CE 对照组在随后 6 周内学习一项具有挑战性的新运动任务(动态平衡;DBT)的效果。我们使用多模态神经影像学(T1 加权磁共振成像(MRI)、弥散加权 MRI、灌注加权 MRI 和静息状态功能 MRI)来研究介导 CE 与学习之间的神经机制。正如预期的那样,接受 CE 的受试者随后以更高的速度学习 DBT。使用一种改进的非参数组合方法和多中介分析,我们表明,这种学习促进是由额叶大脑区域的 CE 诱导的脑血流增加和额颞纤维束的白质微观结构变化引起的。我们的研究揭示了大脑中 CE 学习联系的神经机制,这可能使大脑具有更高的灵活性,以适应高度新颖的环境刺激,例如学习复杂任务。已经确定心血管运动(CE)是促进学习和记忆的有效方法,但对于 CE 通过何种神经传递机制作用于学习知之甚少。我们提供的证据表明,CE 通过前额白质束的可塑性和局部脑血流的增加促进人类参与者的学习。我们的发现是首次证明经验诱导的大脑可塑性具有转移潜力的发现之一。除了对健康专业人员和教练的实际意义外,我们的工作还为未来研究 CE 在额叶灌注不足或白质疾病患者中的影响铺平了道路。