Physical exercise is protective in rodent models of retinal injury and disease. Data suggest that this is in part mediated by brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) signal transduction. It has been hypothesized that exercised-induced neuroprotection may be mediated by increases in circulating lactate that in turn alter BDNF secretion. We therefore tested whether mice undergoing a treadmill running regimen previously shown to be protective in a mouse model of retinal degeneration (RD) have increased serum levels of lactate. Lactate levels in exercised and non-exercised mice were statistically indistinguishable. A role for circulating lactate in exercise-induced retinal protection is unsupported.
Keywords: BDNF; Brain-derived neurotrophic factor; Exercise; Lactate; Mouse; Neuroprotection; Retinal degeneration.