http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2010/jan/18/running-brain-memory-cell-growth


Start running and watch your brain grow, say scientists

• Aerobic exercise triggers new cell growth – study
• Region of brain affected linked to recollection

Emily Maitlis out jogging The television newsreader Emily Maitlis out jogging 
after taking her children to school. Research on mice shows that running and 
other aerobic exercise stimulate the growth of new brain cells, leading to 
enhanced memory recall. Photograph: Beretta/Sims/Rex Features

The health benefits of a regular run have long been known, but scientists have 
never understood the curious ability of exercise to boost brain power.

Now researchers think they have the answer. Neuroscientists at Cambridge 
University have shown that running stimulates the brain to grow fresh grey 
matter and it has a big impact on mental ability.

A few days of running led to the growth of hundreds of thousands of new brain 
cells that improved the ability to recall memories without confusing them, a 
skill that is crucial for learning and other cognitive tasks, researchers said.

The new brain cells appeared in a region that is linked to the formation and 
recollection of memories. The work reveals why jogging and other aerobic 
exercise can improve memory and learning, and potentially slow down the 
deterioration of mental ability that happens with old age.

"We know exercise can be good for healthy brain function, but this work 
provides us with a mechanism for the effect," said Timothy Bussey, a 
behavioural neuroscientist at Cambridge and a senior author on the study. The 
research builds on a growing body of work that suggests exercise plays a vital 
role in keeping the brain healthy by encouraging the growth of fresh brain 
cells.

Previous studies have shown that "neurogenesis" is limited in people with 
depression, but that their symptoms can improve if they exercise regularly. 
Some antidepressant drugs work by encouraging the growth of new brain cells.

Scientists are unsure why exercise triggers the growth of grey matter, but it 
may be linked to increased blood flow or higher levels of hormones that are 
released while exercising. Exercise might also reduce stress, which inhibits 
new brain cells through a hormone called cortisol.

The Cambridge researchers joined forces with colleagues at the US National 
Institute on Ageing in Maryland to investigate the effect of running.

They studied two groups of mice, one of which had unlimited access to a running 
wheel throughout. The other mice formed a control group. In a brief training 
session, the mice were put in front of a computer screen that displayed two 
identical squares side by side. If they nudged the one on the left with their 
nose they received a sugar pellet reward. If they nudged the one on the right, 
they got nothing.

After training the mice went on to do the memory test. The more they nudged the 
correct square, the better they scored. At the start of the test, the squares 
were 30cm apart, but got closer and closer together until they were almost 
touching. This part of the experiment was designed to test how good the mice 
were at separating two very similar memories. The human equivalent could be 
remembering what a person had for dinner yesterday and the day before, or where 
they parked on different trips to the supermarket.

The running mice clocked up an average of 15 miles (24km) a day. Their scores 
in the memory test were nearly twice as high as those of the control group. The 
greatest improvement was seen in the later stages of the experiment, when the 
two squares were so close they nearly touched, according to a report in the 
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"At this stage of the experiment, the two memories the mice are forming of the 
squares are very similar. It is when they have to distinguish between the two 
that these new brain cells really make a difference," Bussey said.

The sedentary mice got steadily worse at the test because their memories became 
too similar to separate.

The scientists also tried to wrongfoot the mice by switching the square that 
produced a food reward. The running mice were quicker to catch on when 
scientists changed them around.

Brain tissue taken from the rodents showed that the running mice had grown 
fresh grey matter during the experiment. Tissue samples from the dentate gyrus 
part of the brain revealed on average 6,000 new brain cells in every cubic 
millimetre. The dentate gyrus is part of the hippocampus, one of the few 
regions of the adult brain that can grow fresh brain cells.
Running stories

"Running! If there's any activity happier, more exhilarating, more nourishing 
to the imagination, I can't think of what it might be. In ­running the mind 
flees with the body, the mysterious efflorescence of language seems to pulse in 
the brain, in rhythm with our feet and the swinging of our arms."

Joyce Carole Oates, American author and professor of creative writing at 
Princeton University:

"When I am running my mind empties itself. Everything I think while running is 
subordinate to the process. The thoughts that impose themselves on me while 
running are like light gusts of wind – they appear all of a sudden, disappear 
again and change nothing."

Haruki Murakami, Japanese author

"When I run, I think about everything: physics, family problems, plans for the 
weekend. I haven't made any big discoveries on a run, but it does give me time 
to think through problems. Some solutions are obvious, but they are only 
obvious when you are relaxed enough to find them."

Wolfgang Ketterle, Nobel prizewinning physicist, MIT

"Being a runner, to me, has made being depressed impossible. If ever I'm going 
through something emotional and just go outside for a run, you can rest assured 
that I'll come back with clarity and empowerment."

Alanis Morissette, singer-songwriter




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