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hypothalamic neurogenesis is not required for the improved insulin sensitivity following exercise training

Version 2 2024-06-04, 01:08
Version 1 2017-07-13, 10:49
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 01:08 authored by ML Borg, M Lemus, A Reichenbach, Ahrathy SelathuraiAhrathy Selathurai, BJ Oldfield, ZB Andrews, MJ Watt
Neurons within the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus (ARC) are important regulators of energy balance. Recent studies suggest that neurogenesis in the ARC is an important regulator of body mass in response to pharmacological stressors. Regular exercise training improves insulin action, and is a primary treatment modality for obesity and type 2 diabetes. We examined whether exercise training causes hypothalamic neurogenesis and whether this contributes to exercise-induced improvements in insulin action. Short-term exercise in adult mice induced a proneurogenic transcriptional program involving growth factors, cell proliferation, and neurogenic regulators in the hypothalamus. Daily exercise training for 7 days increased hypothalamic cell proliferation 3.5-fold above that of sedentary mice, and exercise-induced cell proliferation was maintained in diet-induced obese mice. Colocalization studies indicated negligible neurogenesis in the ARC of sedentary or exercise-trained mice. Blocking cell proliferation via administration of the mitotic blocker arabinosylcytosine (AraC) did not affect food intake or body mass in obese mice. While 4 weeks of exercise training improved whole-body insulin sensitivity compared with sedentary mice, insulin action was not affected by AraC administration. These data suggest that regular exercise training induces significant non-neuronal cell proliferation in the hypothalamus of obese mice, but this proliferation is not required for enhanced insulin action.

History

Journal

Diabetes

Volume

63

Pagination

3647-3658

Location

United States

ISSN

0012-1797

eISSN

1939-327X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2014 American Diabetes Association

Issue

11

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

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