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Timing of exercise differentially modulates fear memory and hippocampal neurotransmitters in male rats

Samuel Bennett et al · Frontiers Media S.A · 2026

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Exercise promotes neurogenesis and enhances memory consolidation while reducing the retention of aversive memories and anxiety-like behaviors. While our previous work found that acute exercise alters neurotransmitter concentrations, including dopamine and serotonin, in a time-of-day-dependent manner, the long-term effects of chronically timed exercise on neurotransmitter dynamics and behavioral phenotypes remain unclear. To examine whether the daily timing of a chronic exercise intervention modulates its impact on neurotransmitter profiles and fear responses, male rats were conditioned using a Pavlovian contextual fear approach, then assigned to a 4-week treadmill exercise intervention performed during the early (ZT14) or late (ZT22) active phase or a time-matched sham-exercise control group. One day after completing training, rats underwent a context retrieval test in the middle of active phase (ZT18), and hippocampal neurotransmitters were quantified using UPLC–MRM/MS. Rats subjected to sham-exercise at ZT22 exhibited higher freezing than sham-exercised rats at ZT14, whereas exercise interventions at ZT22 selectively attenuated freezing. Histamine, acetylcholine, and GABA exhibited significant exercise × time interactions. Direct neurotransmitter–freezing correlations were weak after false discovery rate control, consistent with a network-level reorganization rather than a single transmitter driver. These findings suggest that vulnerability to aversive memory expression can be buffered by exercise, if timed appropriately, and that exercise reshapes hippocampal neuromodulatory tone in a circadian–phase–dependent manner, supporting the potential of exercise timing as a chronotherapeutic strategy to enhance stress resilience and mental wellbeing.

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APA 7

al, S. B. E. (2026). Timing of exercise differentially modulates fear memory and hippocampal neurotransmitters in male rats. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2026.1824029

MLA

al, Samuel Bennett et. "Timing of exercise differentially modulates fear memory and hippocampal neurotransmitters in male rats." 2026. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2026.1824029.

Chicago

al, Samuel Bennett et. 2026. "Timing of exercise differentially modulates fear memory and hippocampal neurotransmitters in male rats.". https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2026.1824029.

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al, S. B. E. 2026, Timing of exercise differentially modulates fear memory and hippocampal neurotransmitters in male rats, Frontiers Media S.A, available at: https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2026.1824029 [Accessed 28 Jun. 2026].

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Título
Timing of exercise differentially modulates fear memory and hippocampal neurotransmitters in male rats
Autor / colaboradores
Samuel Bennett et al
Editorial
Frontiers Media S.A
Año de publicación
2026
ISSN
1662-453X
ISSN
1662-453X
Idioma
eng

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