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Wiley InterScience

European Journal of Neuroscience

European Journal of Neuroscience

Volume 24 Issue 5, Pages 1265 - 1276

Published Online: 15 Sep 2006

Journal compilation © 2010 Federation of European Neuroscience Societies and Blackwell Publishing Ltd



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Exercise affects energy metabolism and neural plasticity-related proteins in the hippocampus as revealed by proteomic analysis
Qinxue Ding 2 , Shoshanna Vaynman 2 , Puneet Souda 3 , Julian P. Whitelegge 3,4 and Fernando Gomez-Pinilla 1,2
  1 Department of Neurosurgery, Brain Injury Research Centre,
  2 Department of Physiological Science,
  3 The Pasarow Mass Spectrometry Laboratory, The Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, School of Medicine and
  4 The Brain Research Institute, UCLA, 621 Charles E. Young Drive, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA
Correspondence to Dr Fernando Gomez-Pinilla, 2Department of Physiological Science, as above.
E-mail: Fgomezpi@ucla.edu
Copyright The Authors (2006). Journal Compilation Federation of European Neuroscience Societies and Blackwell Publishing Ltd
KEYWORDS
chaperones • cytoskeletal proteins • energy metabolism • rat

ABSTRACT

Studies were conducted to evaluate the effect of a brief voluntary exercise period on the expression pattern and post-translational modification of multiple protein classes in the rat hippocampus using proteomics. An analysis of 80 protein spots of relative high abundance on two-dimensional gels revealed that approximately 90% of the proteins identified were associated with energy metabolism and synaptic plasticity. Exercise up-regulated proteins involved in four aspects of energy metabolism, i.e. glycolysis, ATP synthesis, ATP transduction and glutamate turnover. Specifically, we found increases in fructose-bisphosphate aldolase C, phosphoglycerate kinase 1, mitochondrial ATP synthase, ubiquitous mitochondrial creatine kinase and glutamate dehydrogenase 1. Exercise also up-regulated specific synaptic-plasticity-related proteins, the cytoskeletal protein α-internexin and molecular chaperones (chaperonin-containing TCP-1, neuronal protein 22, heat shock 60-kDa protein 1 and heat shock protein 8). Western blot was used to confirm the direction and magnitude of change in ubiquitous mitochondrial creatine kinase, an enzyme essential for transducing mitochondrial-derived ATP to sites of high-energy demand such as the synapse. Protein phosphorylation visualized by Pro-Q Diamond fluorescent staining showed that neurofilament light polypeptide, glial fibrillary acidic protein, heat shock protein 8 and transcriptional activator protein pur-alpha were more intensely phosphorylated with exercise as compared with sedentary control levels. Our results, together with the fact that most of the proteins that we found to be up-regulated have been implicated in cognitive function, support a mechanism by which exercise uses processes of energy metabolism and synaptic plasticity to promote brain health.


Received 27 April 2006, revised 13 June 2006, accepted 20 June 2006

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1460-9568.2006.05026.x About DOI

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