Abstract

Increasing clinical evidence suggests that regular physical exercise can prevent or reduce the incidence of stress-related psychiatric disorders including depressive symptoms. Antidepressant effect of regular exercise may be implicated in monoaminergic transmission including serotonergic transmission, activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, and hippocampal neurogenesis, but few general concepts regarding the optimal exercise regimen for stimulating neural mechanisms involved in antidepressant properties have been developed. Here, we examined how 4 weeks of treadmill running at different intensities (0, 15, 25 m/min, 60 min/day, 5 times/week) alters neuronal activity in the dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN), which is the major source of serotonin (5-HT) neurons in the central nervous system, and the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN), in which corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) neurons initiate the activation of the HPA axis, during one session of acute treadmill running at different speeds (0, 15, 25 m/min, 30 min) in male Wistar rats, using c-Fos immunohistochemistry. We also examined neurogenesis in the hippocampus using immunohistochemistry for doublecortin (DCX) and assessed depressive-like behavior using the forced swim test after regular exercise for 4 weeks. In the pre-training period, acute treadmill running at low speed, but not at high speed, increased c-Fos positive nuclei in the DRN compared with the sedentary control. The number of c-Fos positive nuclei in the PVN during acute treadmill running was increased in a running speed-dependent manner. Regular exercise for 4 weeks, regardless of the training intensity, induced an enhancement of c-Fos expression in the DRN during not only low-speed but also high-speed acute running, and generally reduced c-Fos expression in the PVN during acute running compared with pre-training. Furthermore, regular treadmill running for 4 weeks enhanced DCX immunoreactivity in the hippocampal dentate gyrus (DG), and resulted in decreased depressive-like behavior, regardless of the training intensity. These results suggest that long-term repeated exercise, regardless of the training intensity, improves depressive-like behavior through adaptive changes in the sensitivity of DRN and PVN neurons to acute exercise, and hippocampal neurogenesis.

Highlights

  • There is increasing clinical evidence that physical activity and exercise can reduce or prevent the incidence and symptoms of stress-related psychiatric disorders including depression (Paluska and Schwenk, 2000; Daley, 2008; Duman et al, 2008; Ströhle, 2009; Matta Mello Portugal et al, 2013; Stanton and Reaburn, 2014)

  • Our results suggest that adaptive changes in the neuronal activity in the dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) and paraventricular nucleus (PVN) and hippocampal neurogenesis could contribute to the antidepressant effects of regular physical exercise

  • The present study revealed that 4 weeks of regular treadmill running modulated the sensitivity of neuronal activity in the DRN and PVN to acute exercise, and enhanced neurogenesis in both the ventral and dorsal regions of the hippocampus regardless of the training intensity

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Summary

Introduction

There is increasing clinical evidence that physical activity and exercise can reduce or prevent the incidence and symptoms of stress-related psychiatric disorders including depression (Paluska and Schwenk, 2000; Daley, 2008; Duman et al, 2008; Ströhle, 2009; Matta Mello Portugal et al, 2013; Stanton and Reaburn, 2014). Symptoms of depression associated with dysregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, which is initiated by activation of corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) neurons in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN; Lee et al, 1987; Dunn and Berridge, 1990; Bremner et al, 1997; Arborelius et al, 1999; Baker et al, 1999; Bakshi and Kalin, 2000; Brouwer et al, 2005). CRF neurons in the PVN project to extrahypothalamic brain regions such as the DRN, locus coeruleus, amygdala, and bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, which are regions involved in mood, anxiety, and stress responses (Gray, 1993; Lee and Davis, 1997; Anderson and Shivakumar, 2013). Regular physical exercise may mediate depressive behavior through adaptive changes (i.e., sensitivity) in the neuronal activity in the DRN and PVN

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