Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2, Cognitive Dysfunction, Epigenetics, Exercise Clinical Trial
Official title:
Feasibility Testing a Randomized Controlled Trial of an mHealth-enhanced Exercise Program to Improve Cognition for T2DM Patients
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) impairs the brain, leading to cognitive dysfunction, which carries substantial lifetime consequences. This highlights an urgent need to find effective therapeutic strategies to improve cognitive function among those with T2DM. Aerobic exercise enhances cognitive function among healthy subjects through increased release of BDNF. BDNF supports survival of existing neurons and promotes growth of new neurons and synapses. Emerging evidence suggests that reduced BDNF levels may exacerbate cognitive dysfunction associated with T2DM. Compared to drug delivery of BDNF, aerobic exercise is a low-cost, safe, and easily accessible path to increasing endogenous BDNF levels. One critical genetic variant that affects BDNF secretion and cognition is the BDNF Val66Met variant, which is a common missense polymorphism that results in a valine (Val) to methionine (Met) substitution at codon 66 located in exon IX of the BDNF gene. The Met allele alters intracellular processing, trafficking, packaging of pro-BDNF, and consequently interferes with the activity-dependent secretion of mature BDNF among Met carriers. In addition, previous research reported an influence of the Val66Met variant on the methylation level of the surrounding region. Carrying a G nucleotide (i.e., Val allele) will have an additional CpG site, and Val/Val homozygotes demonstrated a significant increase in methylation levels of four nearby CpG sites compared to Val/Met heterozygotes and Met/Met homozygotes. Because high BDNF gene methylation is associated with reduced BDNF mRNA levels, this may result in lower BDNF levels among Val/Val carriers. However, the transcription of promoter IV can be initiated by exercise, suggesting that epigenetic modulation of BDNF gene expression may be achieved by exercise. It is plausible that exercise may partly reverse transcriptional repression through dynamic DNA demethylation, but the interaction between DNA demethylation and Val homozygosity may be different from that in Met/Met and in Val/Met carriers, which could explain interpersonal differences in cognitive outcomes among these carriers following exercise training. So far, the evidence on the interplay of the Val66Met polymorphism, DNA methylation, and exercise on cognition among individuals with T2DM is still lacking. A total of 42 participants with T2DM will be randomized 2:1 to receive aerobic exercise intervention (n=28) or attention control (n=14) for 3 months. Both groups will receive weekly phone calls during the intervention and standard printed education materials regarding diabetes self-management. In addition to these interventions, the aerobic exercise group (i.e., experimental group) will also perform home-based walking exercise, while the attention control group will perform home-based stretching exercise. Trained students will monitor the exercise sessions for both groups at the Connected Health Platform (hereafter referred to as "platform"). Blood samples will be collected at baseline and three months. Outcomes of interest include post-intervention changes in plasma BDNF levels, BDNF DNA methylation executive function, memory, and processing speed. The study will evaluate the feasibility of the home-based exercise intervention. The study will also evaluate preliminary effectiveness of the supervised exercise program on of the exercise program on BDNF DNA demethylation. An exploratory aim is to explore the association of DNA demethylation with plasma BDNF levels and cognition.
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