Interactions between physical exercise, associative memory, and genetic risk for Alzheimer's disease

1Citations
Citations of this article
20Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

The ϵ4 allele of the APOE gene heightens the risk of late onset Alzheimer's disease. ϵ4 carriers, may exhibit cognitive and neural changes early on. Given the known memory-enhancing effects of physical exercise, particularly through hippocampal plasticity via endocannabinoid signaling, here we aimed to test whether a single session of physical exercise may benefit memory and underlying neurophysiological processes in young ϵ3 carriers (ϵ3/ϵ4 heterozygotes, risk group) compared with a matched control group (homozygotes for ϵ3). Participants underwent fMRI while learning picture sequences, followed by cycling or rest before a memory test. Blood samples measured endocannabinoid levels. At the behavioral level, the risk group exhibited poorer associative memory performance, regardless of the exercising condition. At the brain level, the risk group showed increased medial temporal lobe activity during memory retrieval irrespective of exercise (suggesting neural compensatory effects even at baseline), whereas, in the control group, such increase was only detectable after physical exercise. Critically, an exercise-related endocannabinoid increase correlated with task-related hippocampal activation in the control group only. In conclusion, healthy young individuals carrying the ϵ4 allele may present suboptimal associative memory performance (when compared with homozygote ϵ3 carriers), together with reduced plasticity (and functional over-compensation) within medial temporal structures.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Igloi, K., Marin Bosch, B., Kuenzi, N., Thomas, A., Lauer, E., Bringard, A., & Schwartz, S. (2024). Interactions between physical exercise, associative memory, and genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease. Cerebral Cortex, 34(5). https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhae205

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free