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Restoring Age-Related Cognitive Decline through Environmental Enrichment: A Transcriptomic Approach

Cognitive decline is one of the greatest health threats of old age and the maintenance of optimal brain function across a lifespan remains a big challenge. The hippocampus is considered particularly vulnerable but there is cross-species consensus that its functional integrity benefits from the early...

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Autores principales: Schmidt, Silvio, Haase, Madlen, Best, Lena, Groth, Marco, Lindner, Julia, Witte, Otto W., Kaleta, Christoph, Frahm, Christiane
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9736066/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36497123
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11233864
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author Schmidt, Silvio
Haase, Madlen
Best, Lena
Groth, Marco
Lindner, Julia
Witte, Otto W.
Kaleta, Christoph
Frahm, Christiane
author_facet Schmidt, Silvio
Haase, Madlen
Best, Lena
Groth, Marco
Lindner, Julia
Witte, Otto W.
Kaleta, Christoph
Frahm, Christiane
author_sort Schmidt, Silvio
collection PubMed
description Cognitive decline is one of the greatest health threats of old age and the maintenance of optimal brain function across a lifespan remains a big challenge. The hippocampus is considered particularly vulnerable but there is cross-species consensus that its functional integrity benefits from the early and continuous exercise of demanding physical, social and mental activities, also referred to as environmental enrichment (EE). Here, we investigated the extent to which late-onset EE can improve the already-impaired cognitive abilities of lifelong deprived C57BL/6 mice and how it affects gene expression in the hippocampus. To this end, 5- and 24-month-old mice housed in standard cages (5mSC and 24mSC) and 24-month-old mice exposed to EE in the last 2 months of their life (24mEE) were subjected to a Barnes maze task followed by next-generation RNA sequencing of the hippocampal tissue. Our analyses showed that late-onset EE was able to restore deficits in spatial learning and short-term memory in 24-month-old mice. These positive cognitive effects were reflected by specific changes in the hippocampal transcriptome, where late-onset EE affected transcription much more than age (24mSC vs. 24mEE: 1311 DEGs, 24mSC vs. 5mSC: 860 DEGs). Remarkably, a small intersection of 72 age-related DEGs was counter-regulated by late-onset EE. Of these, Bcl3, Cttnbp2, Diexf, Esr2, Grb10, Il4ra, Inhba, Rras2, Rps6ka1 and Socs3 appear to be particularly relevant as key regulators involved in dendritic spine plasticity and in age-relevant molecular signaling cascades mediating senescence, insulin resistance, apoptosis and tissue regeneration. In summary, our observations suggest that the brains of aged mice in standard cage housing preserve a considerable degree of plasticity. Switching them to EE proved to be a promising and non-pharmacological intervention against cognitive decline.
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spelling pubmed-97360662022-12-11 Restoring Age-Related Cognitive Decline through Environmental Enrichment: A Transcriptomic Approach Schmidt, Silvio Haase, Madlen Best, Lena Groth, Marco Lindner, Julia Witte, Otto W. Kaleta, Christoph Frahm, Christiane Cells Article Cognitive decline is one of the greatest health threats of old age and the maintenance of optimal brain function across a lifespan remains a big challenge. The hippocampus is considered particularly vulnerable but there is cross-species consensus that its functional integrity benefits from the early and continuous exercise of demanding physical, social and mental activities, also referred to as environmental enrichment (EE). Here, we investigated the extent to which late-onset EE can improve the already-impaired cognitive abilities of lifelong deprived C57BL/6 mice and how it affects gene expression in the hippocampus. To this end, 5- and 24-month-old mice housed in standard cages (5mSC and 24mSC) and 24-month-old mice exposed to EE in the last 2 months of their life (24mEE) were subjected to a Barnes maze task followed by next-generation RNA sequencing of the hippocampal tissue. Our analyses showed that late-onset EE was able to restore deficits in spatial learning and short-term memory in 24-month-old mice. These positive cognitive effects were reflected by specific changes in the hippocampal transcriptome, where late-onset EE affected transcription much more than age (24mSC vs. 24mEE: 1311 DEGs, 24mSC vs. 5mSC: 860 DEGs). Remarkably, a small intersection of 72 age-related DEGs was counter-regulated by late-onset EE. Of these, Bcl3, Cttnbp2, Diexf, Esr2, Grb10, Il4ra, Inhba, Rras2, Rps6ka1 and Socs3 appear to be particularly relevant as key regulators involved in dendritic spine plasticity and in age-relevant molecular signaling cascades mediating senescence, insulin resistance, apoptosis and tissue regeneration. In summary, our observations suggest that the brains of aged mice in standard cage housing preserve a considerable degree of plasticity. Switching them to EE proved to be a promising and non-pharmacological intervention against cognitive decline. MDPI 2022-11-30 /pmc/articles/PMC9736066/ /pubmed/36497123 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11233864 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Schmidt, Silvio
Haase, Madlen
Best, Lena
Groth, Marco
Lindner, Julia
Witte, Otto W.
Kaleta, Christoph
Frahm, Christiane
Restoring Age-Related Cognitive Decline through Environmental Enrichment: A Transcriptomic Approach
title Restoring Age-Related Cognitive Decline through Environmental Enrichment: A Transcriptomic Approach
title_full Restoring Age-Related Cognitive Decline through Environmental Enrichment: A Transcriptomic Approach
title_fullStr Restoring Age-Related Cognitive Decline through Environmental Enrichment: A Transcriptomic Approach
title_full_unstemmed Restoring Age-Related Cognitive Decline through Environmental Enrichment: A Transcriptomic Approach
title_short Restoring Age-Related Cognitive Decline through Environmental Enrichment: A Transcriptomic Approach
title_sort restoring age-related cognitive decline through environmental enrichment: a transcriptomic approach
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9736066/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36497123
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11233864
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