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Publication : Exosomal miR-532-5p induced by long-term exercise rescues blood-brain barrier function in 5XFAD mice via downregulation of EPHA4.

First Author  Liang X Year  2023
Journal  Aging Cell Volume  22
Issue  1 Pages  e13748
PubMed ID  36494892 Mgi Jnum  J:334412
Mgi Id  MGI:7427886 Doi  10.1111/acel.13748
Citation  Liang X, et al. (2023) Exosomal miR-532-5p induced by long-term exercise rescues blood-brain barrier function in 5XFAD mice via downregulation of EPHA4. Aging Cell 22(1):e13748
abstractText  The breakdown of the blood-brain barrier, which develops early in Alzheimer's disease (AD), contributes to cognitive impairment. Exercise not only reduces the risk factors for AD but also confers direct protection against cognitive decline. However, the exact molecular mechanisms remain elusive, particularly whether exercise can liberate the function of the blood-brain barrier. Here, we demonstrate that long-term exercise promotes the clearance of brain amyloid-beta by improving the function of the blood-brain barrier in 5XFAD mice. Significantly, treating primary brain pericytes or endothelial cells with exosomes isolated from the brain of exercised 5XFAD mice improves cell proliferation and upregulates PDGFRbeta, ZO-1, and claudin-5. Moreover, exosomes isolated from exercised mice exhibit significant changes in miR-532-5p. Administration or transfection of miR-532-5p to sedentary mice or primary brain pericytes and endothelial cells reproduces the improvement of blood-brain barrier function. Exosomal miR-532-5p targets EPHA4, and accordingly, expression of EphA4 is decreased in exercised mice and miR-532-5p overexpressed mice. A specific siRNA targeting EPHA4 recapitulates the effects on blood-brain barrier-associated cells observed in exercised 5XFAD mice. Overall, our findings suggest that exosomes released by the brain contain a specific miRNA that is altered by exercise and has an impact on blood-brain barrier function in AD.
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