Phys Ed: Your Brain on Exercise

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What goes on inside your brain when you exercise? That question has preoccupied a growing number of scientists in recent years, as well as many of us who exercise. In the late 1990s, Dr. Fred Gage and his colleagues at the Laboratory of Genetics at the Salk Institute in San Diego elegantly proved that human and animal brains produce new brain cells (a process called neurogenesis) and that exercise increases neurogenesis. The brains of mice and rats that were allowed to run on wheels pulsed with vigorous, newly born neurons, and those animals then breezed through mazes and other tests of rodent I.Q., showing that neurogenesis improves thinking.

Phys Ed

But how, exactly, exercise affects the staggeringly intricate workings of the brain at a cellular level has remained largely mysterious. A number of new studies, though, including work published this month by Mr. Gage and his colleagues, have begun to tease out the specific mechanisms and, in the process, raised new questions about just how exercise remolds the brain.

Some of the most reverberant recent studies were performed at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. There, scientists have been manipulating the levels of bone-morphogenetic protein or BMP in the brains of laboratory mice. BMP, which is found in tissues throughout the body, affects cellular development in various ways, some of them deleterious. In the brain, BMP has been found to contribute to the control of stem cell divisions. Your brain, you will be pleased to learn, is packed with adult stem cells, which, given the right impetus, divide and differentiate into either additional stem cells or baby neurons. As we age, these stem cells tend to become less responsive. They don’t divide as readily and can slump into a kind of cellular sleep. It’s BMP that acts as the soporific, says Dr. Jack Kessler, the chairman of neurology at Northwestern and senior author of many of the recent studies. The more active BMP and its various signals are in your brain, the more inactive your stem cells become and the less neurogenesis you undergo. Your brain grows slower, less nimble, older.

But exercise countermands some of the numbing effects of BMP, Dr. Kessler says. In work at his lab, mice given access to running wheels had about 50 percent less BMP-related brain activity within a week. They also showed a notable increase in Noggin, a beautifully named brain protein that acts as a BMP antagonist. The more Noggin in your brain, the less BMP activity exists and the more stem cell divisions and neurogenesis you experience. Mice at Northwestern whose brains were infused directly with large doses of Noggin became, Dr. Kessler says, “little mouse geniuses, if there is such a thing.” They aced the mazes and other tests.

Whether exercise directly reduces BMP activity or increases production of Noggin isn’t yet known and may not matter. The results speak for themselves. “If ever exercise enthusiasts wanted a rationale for what they’re doing, this should be it,” Dr. Kessler says. Exercise, he says, through a complex interplay with Noggin and BMP, helps to ensure that neuronal stem cells stay lively and new brain cells are born.

But there are caveats and questions remaining, as the newest experiment from Dr. Gage’s lab makes clear. In that study, published in the most recent issue of Cell Stem Cell, BMP signaling was found to be playing a surprising, protective role for the brain’s stem cells. For the experiment, stem cells from mouse brains were transferred to petri dishes and infused with large doses of Noggin, hindering BMP activity. Without BMP signals to inhibit them, the stem cells began dividing rapidly, producing hordes of new neurons. But over time, they seemed unable to stop, dividing and dividing again until they effectively wore themselves out. The same reaction occurred within the brains of living (unexercised) mice given large doses of Noggin. Neurogenesis ramped way up, then, after several weeks, sputtered and slowed.  The “pool of active stem cells was depleted,” a news release accompanying the study reported. An overabundance of Noggin seemed to cause stem cells to wear themselves out, threatening their ability to make additional neurons in the future.

This finding raises the obvious and disturbing question: can you overdose on Noggin by, for instance, running for hours, amping up your production of the protein throughout? The answer, Dr. Gage says, is, almost certainly, no. “Many people have been looking into” that issue, he says. But so far, “there has not been any instance of a negative effect from voluntary running” on the brain health of mice. Instead, he says, it seems that the effects of exercise are constrained and soon plateau, causing enough change in the activity of Noggin and BMP to shake slumbering adult stem cells awake, but not enough to goose them into exhausting themselves.

Still, if there’s not yet any discernible ceiling on brain-healthy exercise, there is a floor. You have to do something. Walk, jog, swim, pedal — the exact amount or intensity of the exercise required has not been determined, although it appears that the minimum is blessedly low. In mice, Mr. Gage says, “even a fairly short period” of exercise “and a short distance seems to produce results.”

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Coco @ Opera Girl Cooks July 7, 2010 · 12:38 am

Wow, this is so fascinating! And I love that we have a brain chemical called Noggin. That’s just too much. The Well Blog has become one of my favorite reads!

David Chowes, New York City July 7, 2010 · 1:35 am

Exercise (brisk walking is fine) and intellectual stimulation make John or Jane (all things being equal) a younger feeling and longer living man or woman.

[Note: more scurupulous scientific testing is needed for the above comment to be labeled definitive.]

Paul Feehan, Key Biscayne, FL July 7, 2010 · 6:16 am

I’ve been running barefoot on the beaches of south Florida for nearly 30 years. My current routine is 5 miles on alternate days, a scenic jog down to the lighthouse & back. Besides feeling terrific, I sleep well and have recurring dreams in which I’m usually bounding light-footedly along some beach.

The Healthy L ibrarian July 7, 2010 · 6:17 am

“Exercise is better than any drug or anything else we have for aging. There’s no downside. If this were a drug, it would be the safest, most effective drug in the universe.”

– Dr. James O. Hill, Director of the Center for Human Nutrition at the University of Colorado at Denver-

“Exercise–the most effective prescription out there. It’s the best “drug” available to prevent dementia and insure successful aging. “Evidence Regarding the Benefits of Physical Exercise,”

-Drs. Jeff Williamson & Marco Pahor, Institute on Aging, University of Florida. This editorial in the Archives of Internal Medicine highlights the benefits of exercise on successful healthy aging.-

The evidence for the benefits of exercise on the brain and aging just continues to mount.

“From the Archives of Internal Medicine–Seven Good Reasons to Exercise and Increase Your Chances For Healthy Aging”

//www.happyhealthylonglife.com/happy_healthy_long_life/2010/01/exercise.html

It’s not surprising that there might be a stem cell budget that limits divisions. Without it, you’d be much more likely to see brain cancer. Indeed, I wouldn’t be surprised to see this research have application treating some brain tumors.

FYI, you confuse BMP’s with a different peptide at one point: “The more active *BNP* and its various signals…”

You also don’t state which BMP’s are at issue.

Motion is the Lotion! You have to make Noggin to use your Noggin.

Mark Pettus MD
Dalton,MA

As Jose Jimenez used to say as The Astronaut on “The Ed Sullivan Show”… “WH-H-HAnnggTTT ABOWWWD DA WIDDOH-BIIIITTTY MOUSE?

I completely believe in the brain-exercise connection, but one thing always puzzles me. I wonder why, in high school, the athletes were often considered (often rightly so) the not so smart ones?

Fitness Contrarian July 7, 2010 · 10:12 am

Exercise has always made me feel more alert and clear minded as long as I don’t over do it.

A 45 minute workout improves my ability to concentrate but if I workout too hard and long it exhausts
my body and mind.

You reach a point of diminishing returns with exercise quickly so be smart. If you are exercising hard do it for short periods of time. If you like to exercise for long periods keep it easy.

Short and hard or long and easy is the best way to go for your body and brain when it comes to exercise.

//www.fitnesscontrarian.com/how-hard-and-long-to-work-out/

I’m a little concerned about the condition described of BMP-induced uncontrollable replication of neurons. To be blunt, it sounds like cancer. Granted, this particular experiment was conducted in petri dishes, not in mice; but it’s definitely a mechanism worth exploring further.

Too much of a good thing…

Instead of reducing phys. ed. in school perhaps we should increase it. Or, rather than driving ourselves and our children everywhere, perhaps we ought to walk. Instead of staying inside to play computer games, planting children in front of a computer screen or t.v. set, or being couch potatoes watching athletics we should be participants. But our current work schedules defeat most attempts to exercise. Mandatory overtime for some jobs, implied expectations of overtime in others, and a lack of decent places to work out make regular exercise difficult for many people. Here’s an idea: start building public exercise parks and make them functional as well as attractive. Maintain them. Put exercise in everyone’s reach and help make it part of everyone’s day.

Anybody remember the story/play “Flowers for Algernon”? noggin sounds like the fictional experimental drug described in the plot!

I think one of the keys to the story is the quote by Dr. Gage:

“[T]here has not been any instance of a negative effect from voluntary running” on the brain health of mice.

How many adults “voluntarily” run compared to those who “involuntarily” log x-number of miles per week which include a number of strategies to make sure they go running (articles abound telling people to leave the workout clothes laid out the night before because otherwise we would skip it) and there are countless stories of people not wanting to run or exercise, but forcing themselves to get up and move because they “know it’s good for them.”

“You have to do something” is included in the final paragraph which illuminates the point I think may be missed which is that coercing people to exercise is different than observing people (or mice) who seem to have energy to burn and exercise because they feel like it.

Gary Taubes pointed out something similar in an article in NY Mag where he posited ‘Lance Armstrong is not fit/lean because he works out a lot, he works out a lot because he is fit/lean.’

We observe that people who fidget more than others tend to weigh less, so we advise people to fidget more so we too can weigh less. But many of these studies and observations are probably pointing to some biochemical drive that affects our (sedentary/active) behavior.

If you have 200 mice with treadmills in their cage and 150 of them voluntarily exercise for say the human equivalent of 60 minutes a day, and then you have 50 mice who do not engage in voluntary activity, shouldn’t we be more interested as to why these mice are different? Why aren’t they voluntarily exercising? Why are the other 150 voluntarily exercising? Is it hormonal? Biochemical? Or are they just gluttons and sloths as we perceive so many humans?

One group has energy to burn, the other does not. To prescribe the group that is slothful to become athletes seems to miss the point.

The same might be said for neurogenesis and brain function.

If you live or work in a building with stairs, you have all the exercise equipment and opportunity you need.

Back in the day (1940s) we use to drink a lot of noggin during the holidays. Sometimes we added rum. It tasted good and I would imagine the noggin went straight to our brains. It must have because I would get geddy and makes passes at my aunt Eugenia. So yea, I think there’s something to noggin.

This sentence is really awkward:

“A number of new studies, though, including work published this month and his colleagues, have begun to tease out the specific mechanisms and, in the process, raised new questions about just how exercise remolds the brain.”

I also noticed the confusing sentence about BNP instead of BMP. Is that a typo or a different thing completely? If it’s different, a little more explanation of BNP would be helpful.

To # 9, that’s a good question…maybe because many of the “jocks” participate in very rough sports like football or even boxing. That can’t be good for brain cells!

This would be interesting to study Noggin and BMP in cancer research….

I wonder how this all played out in the days when exercise as a part of a routine day would have been an absurd notion? In other words, it sounds like this is a biological adaptation developed in the time when our human lives were much harder and required much more physical exertion….You were more active, you were more alert and intelligent….Thoughts?

exercise becoming an important part of my life, I cannot go through the day without it , the absorb of oxygen makes me very happy ,

Note this article is referring to the benefits of excercise as you get older – not when you are young. Posters asking why isn’t there more phys. ed in high school, etc. A 19 year old doesn’t need the same brain cell production as a 45 year old – presumably there is enough activity at a younger age.

Regardless this confirms what I have read previously – despite all the mind excercises, mind video games, crosswords, sodoku, etc. the best tonic for a sharper mind when aging is excercise.

I enjoy brain breathing and cranial electrotherapy stimulation.

Wouldn’t this mean that averge professional athletes should be smarter than average non athletes?

I had anxiety issues that required medication. I didn’t like the side effects of the medication and one day I took up running. After a few weeks I no longer needed the anxiety medication. I felt great. If I fail to run for an extended period of time I can feel the anxiety comming back. Exercise was the best “medication” for my brain.

#9: Just because you are exercising more does not make you smarter in school 3Rs. You still have to read the books, do your homework, etc. For the sportsperson, the new cells are probably being used to do better at their sports skills (maybe?). Better able to juke out your opponent, etc?
It may be a bit unreal to extrapolate from exercise to doing very good on SATs (w/o doing the extra hard work of studying), since I doubt very much that it is a linear progression.

.. while i agree that excercise is generally good for all organs in the body, we need to be careful not to reify intelligence as if it were some kind of entity unto itself … your IQ is not going to go up simply because you exercise … we can more safely say it optimizes brain function … and you’ll likely have a higher quality of life if you can moderately exercise on a regular basis …

David Sternman, MD July 7, 2010 · 2:49 pm

Why new neurons ? The holy grail would be to conserve a lifetime’s worth of experiance and memories within synapses that have long ago formed in old neurons
-David Sternman, MD
New York City