TY - JOUR
T1 - Exercise-driven modulation of glutamatergic signaling
T2 - mechanisms and clinical implications
AU - Yu, Candice
AU - Tyler, John R.
AU - Elman, Igor
AU - Blum, Kenneth
AU - Lewandrowski, Kai Uwe
AU - Sharafshah, Alireza
AU - Gold, Mark S.
AU - Pinhasov, Albert
AU - Thanos, Panayotis K.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 International Brain Research Organization (IBRO)
PY - 2025/11/28
Y1 - 2025/11/28
N2 - Exercise is increasingly recognized as a non-pharmacological intervention capable of modulating glutamatergic signaling, but most mechanistic evidence derives from animal models and human data remain scarce. Given its established role in substance use recovery, relapse prevention, and affective stabilization, exercise may act as a regulator of glutamate homeostasis in both healthy and diseased states. In this review, we synthesize findings from 57 studies published between 1998 and 2024, selected from an initial pool of 423 articles based on methodological rigor and relevance. We examine four key domains: (1) exercise-induced changes in glutamate signaling; (2) regulation of NMDA and AMPA receptor expression, phosphorylation, and trafficking; (3) modulation of glutamate-linked pathways; and (4) the impact of exercise type, intensity, and duration on glutamatergic function. Mechanistic work shows that exercise enhances NMDA and AMPA receptor phosphorylation, increases astrocytic glutamate clearance, and normalizes dysregulated signaling in models of addiction, depression, and neurodegeneration. Translational evidence from human studies reveals acute increases in cortical glutamate following vigorous exercise, supporting relevance across species. These effects are context-dependent, varying by intensity, modality, sex, and brain region, with aerobic exercise typically conferring resilience while exhaustive paradigms risk excitotoxicity. Clinical vignettes illustrate potential applications in addiction and perioperative pain management. While these findings are promising, the literature is biased toward male rodents, with limited sex-balanced or large-scale human trials. Future work should incorporate biomarker strategies, stratify by sex, genetics, and comorbidities, and expand beyond aerobic modalities to define when and for whom exercise most effectively modulates glutamatergic signaling.
AB - Exercise is increasingly recognized as a non-pharmacological intervention capable of modulating glutamatergic signaling, but most mechanistic evidence derives from animal models and human data remain scarce. Given its established role in substance use recovery, relapse prevention, and affective stabilization, exercise may act as a regulator of glutamate homeostasis in both healthy and diseased states. In this review, we synthesize findings from 57 studies published between 1998 and 2024, selected from an initial pool of 423 articles based on methodological rigor and relevance. We examine four key domains: (1) exercise-induced changes in glutamate signaling; (2) regulation of NMDA and AMPA receptor expression, phosphorylation, and trafficking; (3) modulation of glutamate-linked pathways; and (4) the impact of exercise type, intensity, and duration on glutamatergic function. Mechanistic work shows that exercise enhances NMDA and AMPA receptor phosphorylation, increases astrocytic glutamate clearance, and normalizes dysregulated signaling in models of addiction, depression, and neurodegeneration. Translational evidence from human studies reveals acute increases in cortical glutamate following vigorous exercise, supporting relevance across species. These effects are context-dependent, varying by intensity, modality, sex, and brain region, with aerobic exercise typically conferring resilience while exhaustive paradigms risk excitotoxicity. Clinical vignettes illustrate potential applications in addiction and perioperative pain management. While these findings are promising, the literature is biased toward male rodents, with limited sex-balanced or large-scale human trials. Future work should incorporate biomarker strategies, stratify by sex, genetics, and comorbidities, and expand beyond aerobic modalities to define when and for whom exercise most effectively modulates glutamatergic signaling.
KW - Exercise
KW - Glutamate
KW - Neuronal communication
KW - Neuroplasticity
KW - NMDA receptor
KW - Reward
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105019491428
U2 - 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2025.10.029
DO - 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2025.10.029
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AN - SCOPUS:105019491428
SN - 0306-4522
VL - 589
SP - 33
EP - 49
JO - Neuroscience
JF - Neuroscience
ER -