Exercise rejuvenates microglia and reverses T cell accumulation in the aged female mouse brain

Author:

Chauquet Solal1,Willis Emily F.2,Grice Laura1,Harley Samuel B. R.3,Powell Joseph E.1,Wray Naomi R.145,Nguyen Quan1,Ruitenberg Marc J.2,Shah Sonia1,Vukovic Jana23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Molecular Bioscience, the University of Queensland Saint Lucia Queensland Australia

2. School of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine The University of Queensland Saint Lucia Queensland Australia

3. Queensland Brain Institute, the University of Queensland Saint Lucia Queensland Australia

4. Department of Psychiatry University of Oxford Oxford UK

5. Oxford Big Data Institute, Li Ka Shing Centre for Health Information and Discovery University of Oxford Oxford UK

Abstract

AbstractSlowing and/or reversing brain ageing may alleviate cognitive impairments. Previous studies have found that exercise may mitigate cognitive decline, but the mechanisms underlying this remain largely unclear. Here we provide unbiased analyses of single‐cell RNA sequencing data, showing the impacts of exercise and ageing on specific cell types in the mouse hippocampus. We demonstrate that exercise has a profound and selective effect on aged microglia, reverting their gene expression signature to that of young microglia. Pharmacologic depletion of microglia further demonstrated that these cells are required for the stimulatory effects of exercise on hippocampal neurogenesis but not cognition. Strikingly, allowing 18‐month‐old mice access to a running wheel did by and large also prevent and/or revert T cell presence in the ageing hippocampus. Taken together, our data highlight the profound impact of exercise in rejuvenating aged microglia, associated pro‐neurogenic effects and on peripheral immune cell presence in the ageing female mouse brain.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Sylvia and Charles Viertel Charitable Foundation

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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