TY - JOUR
T1 - Hippocampal neurons respond to brain activity with functional hypoxia
AU - Butt, Umer Javed
AU - Steixner-Kumar, Agnes A
AU - Depp, Constanze
AU - Sun, Ting
AU - Hassouna, Imam
AU - Wüstefeld, Liane
AU - Arinrad, Sahab
AU - Zillmann, Matthias R
AU - Schopf, Nadine
AU - Fernandez Garcia-Agudo, Laura
AU - Mohrmann, Leonie
AU - Bode, Ulli
AU - Ronnenberg, Anja
AU - Hindermann, Martin
AU - Goebbels, Sandra
AU - Bonn, Stefan
AU - Katschinski, Dörthe M
AU - Miskowiak, Kamilla W
AU - Nave, Klaus-Armin
AU - Ehrenreich, Hannelore
PY - 2021/6
Y1 - 2021/6
N2 - Physical activity and cognitive challenge are established non-invasive methods to induce comprehensive brain activation and thereby improve global brain function including mood and emotional well-being in healthy subjects and in patients. However, the mechanisms underlying this experimental and clinical observation and broadly exploited therapeutic tool are still widely obscure. Here we show in the behaving brain that physiological (endogenous) hypoxia is likely a respective lead mechanism, regulating hippocampal plasticity via adaptive gene expression. A refined transgenic approach in mice, utilizing the oxygen-dependent degradation (ODD) domain of HIF-1α fused to CreERT2 recombinase, allows us to demonstrate hypoxic cells in the performing brain under normoxia and motor-cognitive challenge, and spatially map them by light-sheet microscopy, all in comparison to inspiratory hypoxia as strong positive control. We report that a complex motor-cognitive challenge causes hypoxia across essentially all brain areas, with hypoxic neurons particularly abundant in the hippocampus. These data suggest an intriguing model of neuroplasticity, in which a specific task-associated neuronal activity triggers mild hypoxia as a local neuron-specific as well as a brain-wide response, comprising indirectly activated neurons and non-neuronal cells.
AB - Physical activity and cognitive challenge are established non-invasive methods to induce comprehensive brain activation and thereby improve global brain function including mood and emotional well-being in healthy subjects and in patients. However, the mechanisms underlying this experimental and clinical observation and broadly exploited therapeutic tool are still widely obscure. Here we show in the behaving brain that physiological (endogenous) hypoxia is likely a respective lead mechanism, regulating hippocampal plasticity via adaptive gene expression. A refined transgenic approach in mice, utilizing the oxygen-dependent degradation (ODD) domain of HIF-1α fused to CreERT2 recombinase, allows us to demonstrate hypoxic cells in the performing brain under normoxia and motor-cognitive challenge, and spatially map them by light-sheet microscopy, all in comparison to inspiratory hypoxia as strong positive control. We report that a complex motor-cognitive challenge causes hypoxia across essentially all brain areas, with hypoxic neurons particularly abundant in the hippocampus. These data suggest an intriguing model of neuroplasticity, in which a specific task-associated neuronal activity triggers mild hypoxia as a local neuron-specific as well as a brain-wide response, comprising indirectly activated neurons and non-neuronal cells.
KW - Animals
KW - Brain
KW - Hippocampus
KW - Humans
KW - Hypoxia
KW - Mice
KW - Neuronal Plasticity
KW - Neurons
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85100703127&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/s41380-020-00988-w
DO - 10.1038/s41380-020-00988-w
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 33564132
SN - 1359-4184
VL - 26
SP - 1790
EP - 1807
JO - Molecular Psychiatry
JF - Molecular Psychiatry
IS - 6
ER -