Saturday, May 9, 2026
English News
  • Hyderabad
  • Telangana
  • AP News
  • India
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Sport
  • Science and Tech
  • Business
  • Rewind
  • ...
    • NRI
    • View Point
    • cartoon
    • My Space
    • Education Today
    • Reviews
    • Property
    • Lifestyle
E-Paper
  • NRI
  • View Point
  • cartoon
  • My Space
  • Reviews
  • Education Today
  • Property
  • Lifestyle
Home | Lifestyle | Motivation Is Affected By Oxidative Stress Nutrition Can Help Study

Motivation is affected by oxidative stress, nutrition can help: Study

The researchers focused on an area deep into the brain called the "nucleus accumbens," which is known to play a major role regulating functions like reward, reinforcement, aversion, and not least, motivation.

By ANI
Updated On - 4 December 2022, 12:35 PM
Motivation is affected by oxidative stress, nutrition can help: Study
whatsapp facebook twitter telegram

Washington: In life, motivation can be the difference between success and failure, goal-setting and aimlessness, and well-being and unhappiness. And yet, becoming and staying motivated is often the hardest step, a problem which has prompted much research.

A very small part of that research has looked into the question of metabolism. “Do differences in metabolites in the brain affect our capacity for motivation?” asks Professor Carmen Sandi at EPFL’s School of Life Sciences. “If that is the case, could nutritional interventions that can affect metabolite levels be an effective vehicle to improve motivated performance?” Sandi’s group, with their colleagues at the Nestle Institute of Health Sciences, have now published a study that shines the first light into answering that question.

Also Read

  • Understand why brain is the ‘command and control system’

The researchers focused on an area deep into the brain called the “nucleus accumbens,” which is known to play a major role regulating functions like reward, reinforcement, aversion, and not least, motivation.

The idea behind the study was that the brain itself — like all tissues in our body — is subjected to constant oxidative stress, as a result of its metabolism.

What is oxidative stress? As cells “eat” various molecules for fuel, they produce a number of toxic waste products in the form of highly reactive molecules collectively known as “oxidative species.”

Of course, cells have a number of mechanisms in place to clear oxidative species out, restoring the cell’s chemical balance.

But that battle is ongoing, sometimes that balance is disturbed and that disturbance that’s what we call “oxidative stress.” The brain then is often subjected to excessive oxidative stress from its neurometabolic processes — and the question for the researchers was whether antioxidant levels in the nucleus accumbens can affect motivation. To answer the question, the scientists looked at the brain’s most important antioxidant, a protein called glutathione (GSH), and its relationship to motivation.

“We assessed relationships between metabolites in the nucleus accumbens — a key brain region — and motivated performance,” says Sandi. “We then turned to animals to understand the mechanism and probe causality between the found metabolite and performance, proving as well that nutritional interventions modify behavior through this pathway.” First, they used a technique called “proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy,” which can assess and quantify the biochemistry in a specific region of the brain in a non-invasive way.

The researchers applied the technique to the nucleus accumbens of both humans and rats to measure the levels of GSH. They then compared those levels to how well or poorly their human and animal subjects performed in standardized, effort-related tasks that measure motivation.

What they found was that higher levels of GSH in the nucleus accumbens correlated with better and steady performance in the motivation tasks. But correlation does not imply causation, so the team moved on to live experiments with rats that were given micro-injections of a GSH blocker, downregulating the synthesis and levels of the antioxidant. The rats now showed less motivation, as seen in a poorer performance in effort-based, reward-incentivized tests.

On the contrary, when the researchers gave rats a nutritional intervention with the GSH precursor N-acetylcysteine — which increased GSH levels in the nucleus accumbens — the animals performed better. The effect was “potentially mediated by a cell-type specific shift in glutamatergic inputs to accumbal medium spiny neurons,” as the authors write.

“Our study provides novel insights on how brain metabolism relates to behavior and puts forward nutritional interventions targeting key oxidative process as ideal interventions to facilitate effortful endurance,” conclude the authors. The study’s findings “suggest that improvement of accumbal antioxidant function may be a feasible approach to boost motivation.” “N-acetylcysteine, the nutritional supplement that we gave in our study can also be synthesized in the body from its precursor cysteine,” says Sandi.

“Cysteine is contained in ‘high-protein foods’, such as meat, chicken, fish or seafood. Other sources with lower content are eggs, whole-grain foods such as breads and cereals, and some vegetables such as broccoli, onions, and legumes. “Of course, there are other ways beyond N-acetylcysteine to increase GSH levels in the body, but how they relate to levels in the brain — and particularly in the nucleus accumbens — is largely unknown. Our study represents a proof of principle that dietary N-acetylcysteine can increase brain GSH levels and facilitate effortful behavior.”

  • Follow Us :
  • Tags
  • brain
  • Motivation
  • Nutrition
  • Stress

Related News

  • Why the ‘8×8’ water rule no longer applies, according to Indian nutrition experts

    Why the ‘8×8’ water rule no longer applies, according to Indian nutrition experts

  • Why do I seem to get sick as soon as I take time off?

    Why do I seem to get sick as soon as I take time off?

  • Injury-related stress drives man to suicide in Medak

    Injury-related stress drives man to suicide in Medak

  • The 400 gram rule: New guidelines reveal how much fruit and vegetables Indians really need

    The 400 gram rule: New guidelines reveal how much fruit and vegetables Indians really need

Latest News

  • WFI issues showcause notice to Vinesh, declares her ineligible to compete till June 26

    1 min ago
  • Sanjay Shirsat accuses AIMIM’s Imtiaz Jaleel of aiding Nida Khan

    14 mins ago
  • Ex-IPS officer moves SC over Governor’s refusal to invite TVK

    20 mins ago
  • SC says inheritance rights denied even during pending murder trial

    24 mins ago
  • Bhopal 90-degree overbridge row deepens as suspended engineers reinstated amid inquiry

    26 mins ago
  • SEBI proposes stricter rules for open-market buybacks

    29 mins ago
  • Yuvraj lone Indian to make cut, Shubhankar, Veer miss out in Spain

    34 mins ago
  • Vijay Deverakonda’s new ‘Rowdy Janardhana’ still released on his birthday

    45 mins ago

company

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

business

  • Subscribe

telangana today

  • Telangana
  • Hyderabad
  • Latest News
  • Entertainment
  • World
  • Andhra Pradesh
  • Science & Tech
  • Sport

follow us

  • Telangana Today Telangana Today
Telangana Today Telangana Today

© Copyrights 2024 TELANGANA PUBLICATIONS PVT. LTD. All rights reserved. Powered by Veegam