| Literature DB >> 31226771 |
Paul D Loprinzi1, Pamela Ponce2, Liye Zou3, Hong Li4,5,6.
Abstract
The objective of the present review was to evaluate whether exercise can counteract a potential high-fat diet-induced memory impairment effect. The evaluated databases included: Google Scholar, Sports Discus, Embase/PubMed, Web of Science, and PsychInfo. Studies were included if: (1) an experimental/intervention study was conducted, (2) the experiment/intervention included both a high-fat diet and exercise group, and evaluated whether exercise could counteract the negative effects of a high-fat diet on memory, and (3) evaluated memory function (any type) as the outcome measure. In total, 17 articles met the inclusionary criteria. All 17 studies (conducted in rodents) demonstrated that the high-fat diet protocol impaired memory function and all 17 studies demonstrated a counteracting effect with chronic exercise engagement. Mechanisms of these robust effects are discussed herein.Entities:
Keywords: cytokines; hippocampal neurogenesis; inflammation; insulin resistance; obesity
Year: 2019 PMID: 31226771 PMCID: PMC6627483 DOI: 10.3390/brainsci9060145
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Sci ISSN: 2076-3425
Extraction table of the evaluated studies.
| Study | Subjects | Exercise Protocol | Diet Protocol | Temporal Assessment of Exercise and Diet | Memory Assessment | Did High-Fat Diet Impair Memory? | Did Exercise Counteract Diet-Induced Memory Impairment? | Mechanisms |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Molteni et al. (2004) [ | Fisher 344 rats, 2 months old | Free access to running wheel for 2 months. | 2 months on high in saturated and monounsaturated fat (primarily from lard plus a small amount of corn oil, approx. 39% energy) | Concurrent | Morris water maze | Yes | Yes | Exercise reversed the decrease in BDNF and its downstream effector, synapsin I (involved in BDNF release). Exercise also increase CREB transcription. |
| Maesako et al. (2012) [ | APP transgenic mice overexpressing the familial AD-linked mutation | Enriched environment with access to running wheel; this occurred from weeks 10–20 (i.e., 10 weeks into the high-fat diet). | 20 weeks of high-fat diet, involving 60% fat, 20% CHO, and 20% protein | Concurrent | Morris water maze | Yes | Yes | Enriched environment attenuated diet-induced Aβ deposition. |
| Maesako et al. (2012) [ | APP transgenic mice overexpressing the familial AD-linked mutation | Voluntary access to running wheel. | 20 weeks of high-fat diet, involving 60% fat, 20% CHO, and 20% protein | Concurrent | Morris water maze | Yes | Yes | Exercise attenuated diet-induced Aβ deposition and strengthened the activity of neprilysin, the Aβ-degrading enzyme. |
| Maesako et al. (2013) [ | APP transgenic mice overexpressing the familial AD-linked mutation | Voluntary access to running wheel. | 20 weeks of high-fat diet, involving 60% fat, 20% CHO, and 20% protein | Concurrent | Morris water maze | Yes | Yes, but only if the exercise occurred throughout the majority of the diet protocol | |
| Woo et al. (2013) [ | 4-week-old Sprague–Dawley rats | Treadmill exercise for the first 8 weeks, involving a progressive exercise program, ranging from 40 to 60 min/day of exercise. | 13-weeks of high-fat diet, involving 45% fat | Concurrent | Morris water maze | Yes | Yes | Upregulation of BDNF and MAPK. |
| Noble et al. (2014) [ | 7-month-old Naïve rats | Forced treadmill or voluntary wheel access for 7 weeks | 16 weeks of high-fat diet | Exercise occurring after high-fat diet (treatment) | Two-way active avoidance test | Yes | Yes | Increased BDNF in CA3. |
| Cheng et al. (2016) [ | Twelve-week-old C57BL/6J mice | Treadmill running, 60 min/day, 5 times/week, 15 m/min, for 16 weeks. | 16 weeks of high-fat diet ad libitum, involving 60% fat, 20% CHO, and 20% protein | Concurrent | Morris water maze | Yes | Yes | p-CREB, BACE1, IDE, and PSD95 were likely mediators of this effect. |
| Kang et al. (2016) [ | Sprague–Dawley rats aged 8 weeks | Treadmill running, 30 min/day, 5 days/week, for 8 weeks. | High fat diet (60% fat) for 20 weeks | Exercise occurring after high-fat diet (treatment) | Passive avoidance task | Yes | Yes | Reduction in pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, interleukin-1β). |
| Kim et al. (2016) [ | Male C57BL/6 mice, 4-weeks old | Treadmill exercise, ranging from 30 to 50 min/day; progressive over a 20-week period. | High-fat diet (60% fat) for 20 weeks ad libitum | Exercise occurring after high-fat diet (treatment) | Y-maze test and radial-8-arm maze test | Yes | Yes | Increased expression of BDNF and TrkB and enhanced cell proliferation. |
| Klein et al. (2016) [ | Six-week-old female C57Bl/6N mice | Free access to running wheel. | 12 weeks of high-fat diet, involving 60% fat, 20% CHO, and 20% protein | Concurrent | Morris water maze | Yes, but only in adolescent | Yes | Modulation of hippocampal neurogenesis. |
| Park et al. (2017) [ | Male 4-week-old C57BL/6 mice | Treadmill exercise, 6 days/week, approx. 40 min/day, for 12 weeks. | 20 weeks of high-fat diet, involving 60% fat ad libitum | Exercise occurring after high-fat diet (treatment) | Step-down avoidance task | Yes | Yes | Reduced insulin resistance, improved mitochondrial function, and reduced apoptosis in the hippocampus. |
| Cheng et al. (2018) [ | Male 3-week-old SHR and normotensive Wistar–Kyoto rats | Swimming exercise for 6 weeks. | 6 weeks of low-soybean oil diet | Concurrently | Morris water maze | Yes | Yes | Up-regulation of BDNF and NMDA-r expression. |
| Jeong et al. (2018) [ | Sprague–Dawley rats aged 20 weeks | Treadmill exercise for 8 weeks, 30 min/day, 8 m/min, 5 days/week. | High-fat diet for 20 weeks | Exercise occurring after high-fat diet (treatment) | Water maze and passive avoidance tasks | Yes | Yes | Improved brain insulin signaling, inhibition of obesity-induced NADPH-oxidase activity. |
| Jeong et al. (2018) [ | Sprague–Dawley rats aged 8 weeks | Treadmill exercise for 8 weeks, 30 min/day, 5 days/week, progressive intensity. | High fat diet for 20 weeks, including 20% CHO, 60% fat, and 20% protein | Exercise occurring after high-fat diet (treatment) | Passive avoidance task | Yes | Yes | Improved brain insulin signaling (PI3K/AKT/GSK-3β), reduced tau hyperphosphorylation. |
| Shi et al. (2018) [ | Male C57BL/6 mice and SIRT3 mice (2-months old) | Exercise started at week 6 and continued for the remaining 6 weeks. Engaged in aerobic intermittent training, 30 min/day, 5 days/week. Intermittent exercise involved 4-min bursts at 80–85% of VO2max, with 2 min active recovery periods. | High-fat diet of 45% kcal fat, 20% kcal protein, and 35% kcal CHO for 12 weeks | Concurrent | Morris water maze | Yes | Yes | SIRT3 upregulation and improvement in antioxidative activity |
| Han et al. (2019) [ | Six-week-old C57BL/6 mice | 23 weeks of treadmill running, 30 min/day, 5 days/week, at 8 m/min. | 23 weeks of high-fat diet ad libitum, involving 60% fat | Concurrent | Morris water maze | Yes | Yes | Reduced number of apoptotic cells and increased BDNF. |
| Mehta et al. (2019) [ | Sprague–Dawley male rats | Running wheel access for 6 weeks, 25–30 min/day, 5 days/week. | 15 days of high-fat diet (310 gm/kg Lard) | Exercise occurring after high-fat diet (treatment) | Passive avoidance and elevated plus maze | Yes | Yes | Reduction in neuroinflammatory markers (e.g., IL-1β, TNF-α). |
Figure 1Schematic illustrating the mechanistic role through which exercise may counteract a high-fat diet-induced impairment of memory function.