Platelets can replicate the benefits of exercise in the brain

Publicly released:
Australia; QLD
Neural stem cells in a mouse hippocampus shown in green (cell bodies shown in blue) give rise to new mature neurons.
Neural stem cells in a mouse hippocampus shown in green (cell bodies shown in blue) give rise to new mature neurons.

In a study on mice by the University of Queensland, researchers have found an injection of a specific blood factor can replicate the benefits of exercise in the brain. Dr Odette Leiter and Dr Tara Walker from UQ’s Queensland Brain Institute led a team which discovered platelets, the tiny blood cells critical for blood clotting, secrete a protein that rejuvenates neurons in aged mice in a similar way to physical exercise.

Media release

From: Queensland Brain Institute

Pre-clinical trials by University of Queensland researchers have found an injection of a specific blood factor can replicate the benefits of exercise in the brain.

Dr Odette Leiter and Dr Tara Walker from UQ’s Queensland Brain Institute led a team which discovered platelets, the tiny blood cells critical for blood clotting, secrete a protein that rejuvenates neurons in aged mice in a similar way to physical exercise.

“We know exercise increases production of new neurons in the hippocampus, the part of the brain important for learning and memory, but the mechanism hasn’t been clear,” Dr Leiter said.

“Our previous research has shown platelets are involved, but this study shows platelets are actually required for this effect in the aged mice.”

The researchers focused on exerkines, the biological compounds released into the bloodstream during exercise, which are believed to stimulate the exercise-induced response in the brain.

“We discovered that the exerkine CXCL4/Platelet factor 4 or PF4, which is released from platelets after exercise, results in regenerative and cognitive improvements when injected into aged mice,” Dr Leiter said.

Dr Walker said the findings have significant implications for the development of drug interventions.

“For a lot of people with health conditions, mobility issues or of advanced age, exercise isn’t possible, so pharmacological intervention is an important area of research,” she said.

“We can now target platelets to promote neurogenesis, enhance cognition and counteract age-related cognitive decline.”

The researchers said the next step is to test the response in Alzheimer diseased mice, before moving towards human trials.

“It’s important to note this is not a replacement for exercise,” Dr Walker said.

“But it could help the very elderly or someone who has had a brain injury or stroke to improve cognition.”

The study is published in Nature Communications.

Journal/
conference:
Nature Communications
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Queensland Brain Institute, The University of Queensland
Funder: This project was partly funded by The Clem Jones Centre for Ageing Dementia Research, National Institutes of Health (R01AG077816; T.L.W. and S.A.V.) and received philanthropic support from The Brazil Family Program for Neurology and The Donald & Joan Wilson Foundation Ltd. O.L. received a Walter Benjamin Postdoctoral Fellowship from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation, project number 668329) and postdoctoral fellowship from the Deutscher Akademischer Auslandsdienst (DAAD; German Academic Exchange Service). V.A. was supported by an Australian Research Council Future Fellowship (FT220100485). X.L.H.Y. received a Research Training Program Scholarship from the Australian Government and the University of Queensland, as well as the Ian Lindenmayer PhD Top-up Scholarship.
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