Abstract

Age-related cognitive changes can be the first indication of the progression to dementias, such as Alzheimer’s disease. These changes may be driven by a complex interaction of factors including diet, activity levels, genetics, and environment. Here we review the evidence supporting relationships between flavonoids, physical activity, and brain function. Recent in vivo experiments and human clinical trials have shown that flavonoid-rich foods can inhibit neuroinflammation and enhance cognitive performance. Improved cognition has also been correlated with a physically active lifestyle, and with the functionality and diversity of the gut microbiome. The great majority (+ 90%) of dietary flavonoids are biotransformed into phytoactive phenolic metabolites at the gut microbiome level prior to absorption, and these prebiotic flavonoids modulate microbiota profiles and diversity. Health-relevant outcomes from flavonoid ingestion may only be realized in the presence of a robust microbiome. Moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) accelerates the catabolism and uptake of these gut-derived anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory metabolites into circulation. The gut microbiome exerts a profound influence on cognitive function; moderate exercise and flavonoid intake influence cognitive benefits; and exercise and flavonoid intake influence the microbiome. We conclude that there is a potential for combined impacts of flavonoid intake and physical exertion on cognitive function, as modulated by the gut microbiome, and that the combination of a flavonoid-rich diet and routine aerobic exercise may potentiate cognitive benefits and reduce cognitive decline in an aging population, via mechanisms mediated by the gut microbiome. Mechanistic animal studies and human clinical interventions are needed to further explore this hypothesis.

Highlights

  • The brain can be a neglected aspect of human health

  • We review the extant literature and weave the three – flavonoids, exercise, and the gut microbiome – together to form a more complete picture of how lifestyle affects cognition and how we can prevent the deterioration of cognitive abilities across the lifespan

  • We posit that cognition are linked to the composition, functionality, and diversity of the gut microbiota, in part because gut microbiota regulate the production and delivery of microbiome-catabolized phenolic metabolites into circulation following intake of flavonoid-rich foods (Dinan et al, 2015; Manderino et al, 2017; Chu et al, 2019)

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Summary

Introduction

The brain can be a neglected aspect of human health. Typically, brain health is not a consideration until people reach their 50s or 60s, when brain function can become less reliable. Improved cognition is associated with a physically active lifestyle, a healthy diet, and a robust, diverse gut microbiome (the gut-brain axis) (Schlegel et al, 2019; Westfall and Pasinetti, 2019).

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