Abstract

Brain cytokines, induced by various inflammatory challenges, have been linked to sickness behaviors, including fatigue. However, the relationship between brain cytokines and fatigue after exercise is not well understood. Delayed recovery of running performance after muscle-damaging downhill running is associated with increased brain IL-1β concentration compared with uphill running. However, there has been no systematic evaluation of the direct effect of brain IL-1β on running performance after exercise-induced muscle damage. This study examined the specific role of brain IL-1β on running performance (either treadmill or wheel running) after uphill and downhill running by manipulating brain IL-1β activity via intracerebroventricular injection of either IL-1 receptor antagonist (ra; downhill runners) or IL-1β (uphill runners). Male C57BL/6 mice were assigned to the following groups: uphill-saline, uphill-IL-1β, downhill-saline, or downhill-IL-1ra. Mice initially ran on a motor-driven treadmill at 22 m/min and −14% or +14% grade for 150 min. After the run, at 8 h (wheel cage) or 22 h (treadmill), uphill mice received intracerebroventricular injections of IL-1β (900 pg in 2 μl saline) or saline (2 μl), whereas downhill runners received IL-1ra (1.8 μg in 2 μl saline) or saline (2 μl). Later (2 h), running performance was measured (wheel running activity and treadmill run to fatigue). Injection of IL-1β significantly decreased wheel running activity in uphill runners ( P < 0.01), whereas IL-1ra improved wheel running in downhill runners ( P < 0.05). Similarly, IL-1β decreased and Il-1ra increased run time to fatigue in the uphill and downhill runners, respectively ( P < 0.01). These results support the hypothesis that increased brain IL-1β plays an important role in fatigue after muscle-damaging exercise.

Keywords

SalineTreadmillWheel runningInternal medicineMedicineAntagonistEndocrinologyPhysical therapyPhysical medicine and rehabilitationReceptor

MeSH Terms

AnimalsBrainCentral Nervous SystemGene Expression RegulationInterleukin 1 Receptor Antagonist ProteinInterleukin-1betaMaleMiceMiceInbred C57BLMuscle ContractionMuscle FatiguePhysical ConditioningAnimalReceptorsInterleukin-1Time Factors

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Publication Info

Year
2006
Type
article
Volume
291
Issue
5
Pages
R1344-R1348
Citations
94
Access
Closed

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94
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Cite This

Martin D. Carmichael, J. Mark Davis, E. Angela Murphy et al. (2006). Role of brain IL-1β on fatigue after exercise-induced muscle damage. American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology , 291 (5) , R1344-R1348. https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.00141.2006

Identifiers

DOI
10.1152/ajpregu.00141.2006
PMID
16778069

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%