Plaza Florido, AbelEsteban Cornejo, IreneMora González, JoséTorres-López, Lucía V.Osuna Prieto, Francisco J.Gil Cosano, José J.Radom-Aizik, ShlomitLabayen Goñi, IdoiaRuiz, Jonatan R.Altmäe, SigneOrtega, Francisco B.2024-05-282023Plaza-Florido, A., Esteban-Cornejo, I., Mora-Gonzalez, J., Torres-Lopez, L. V., Osuna-Prieto, F. J., Gil-Cosano, J. J., Radom-Aizik, S., Labayen, I., Ruiz, J. R., Altmäe, S., Ortega, F. B. (2023) Gene-exercise interaction on brain health in children with overweight/obesity: the ActiveBrains randomized controlled trial. Journal of Applied Physiology, 135(4), 775-785. https://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00435.2023.8750-758710.1152/japplphysiol.00435.2023https://academica-e.unavarra.es/handle/2454/48203We investigated the interaction between a genetic score and an exercise intervention on brain health in children with overweight/obesity. One hundred one children with overweight/obesity (10.0 ± 1.5 yr, 59% girls) were randomized into a 20-wk combined exercise intervention or a control group. Several cognitive and academic outcomes were measured with validated tests. Hippocampal volume was quantified using magnetic resonance imaging. Six brain health-related polymorphisms [rs6265 (BDNF), rs2253206 (CREB1), rs2289656 (NTRK2), rs4680 (COMT), rs429358, and rs7412 (APOE)] were genotyped. Cognitive flexibility and academic skills improved significantly more in the exercise than in the control group only in the children with a “favorable” genetic profile [mean z-score, 0.41–0.67 (95% CI 0.11 to 1.18)], yet not in those with “less favorable” genetic profile. An individual response analysis showed that children responded to exercise in cognitive flexibility only in the “genetically favorable” group [i.e., 62% of them had a meaningful (≥0.2 Cohen d) increase in the exercise group compared with only 25% in the control group]. This finding was consistent in per-protocol and intention-to-treat analyses (P = 0.01 and P = 0.03, respectively). The results were not significant or not consistent for the rest of outcomes studied. Our findings suggest that having a more favorable genetic profile makes children with overweight/obesity more responsive to exercise, particularly for cognitive flexibility.application/pdfeng© 2023 the American Physiological Society.CognitionFitnessGeneticsPediatricsPhysical activityGene-exercise interaction on brain health in children with overweight/obesity: the ActiveBrains randomized controlled trialinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article2024-05-28info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess