| Literature DB >> 22329651 |
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease [AD] is the most common cause of dementia in North America. Despite 30+ years of intense investigation, the field lacks consensus regarding the etiology and pathogenesis of sporadic AD, and therefore we still do not know the best strategies for treating and preventing this debilitating and costly disease. However, growing evidence supports the concept that AD is fundamentally a metabolic disease with substantial and progressive derangements in brain glucose utilization and responsiveness to insulin and insulin-like growth factor [IGF] stimulation. Moreover, AD is now recognized to be heterogeneous in nature, and not solely the end-product of aberrantly processed, misfolded, and aggregated oligomeric amyloid-beta peptides and hyperphosphorylated tau. Other factors, including impairments in energy metabolism, increased oxidative stress, inflammation, insulin and IGF resistance, and insulin/IGF deficiency in the brain should be incorporated into all equations used to develop diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to AD. Herein, the contributions of impaired insulin and IGF signaling to AD-associated neuronal loss, synaptic disconnection, tau hyperphosphorylation, amyloid-beta accumulation, and impaired energy metabolism are reviewed. In addition, we discuss current therapeutic strategies and suggest additional approaches based on the hypothesis that AD is principally a metabolic disease similar to diabetes mellitus. Ultimately, our ability to effectively detect, monitor, treat, and prevent AD will require more efficient, accurate and integrative diagnostic tools that utilize clinical, neuroimaging, biochemical, and molecular biomarker data. Finally, it is imperative that future therapeutic strategies for AD abandon the concept of uni-modal therapy in favor of multi-modal treatments that target distinct impairments at different levels within the brain insulin/IGF signaling cascades.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22329651 PMCID: PMC3349985 DOI: 10.2174/156720512799015037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Alzheimer Res ISSN: 1567-2050 Impact factor: 3.498
Metabolic Hypothesis of Alzheimer's Disease-Consequences of Brain Insulin Resistance
| Impairment | Adverse Effect | Role in Alzheimer's Disease |
|---|---|---|
| GLUT4 function | Reduced glucose uptake and utilization | Energy deficits; compromised homeostatic functions, disruption of neuronal cytoskeleton, synaptic disconnection |
| Insulin receptor function | Decreased signaling through IRS, PI3K-Akt | Reduced neuronal and oligodendroglial survival, neuronal plasticity, myelin maintenance |
| Increased activation of GSK-3β and phosphatases that negatively regulate insulin signaling | Increased tau phosphorylation, oxidative stress,
neuro-inflammation, pro-apoptosis signaling | |
| Reduced insulin-responsive gene expression | Reduced choline acetyltransferase expression -->
deficits in acetylcholine | |
| Insulin receptor function or hyper-insulinemia | Endothelial cell injury, intimal thickening, and vessel wall fibrosis | Microvascular disease and cerebral hypoperfusion |
| Mitochondrial function | Increased oxidative stress, ROS, RNS | DNA damage, lipid peroxidation, energy deficits, cell death, increased AβPP expression, Aβ42 deposition and fibrillarization |
| Myelin maintenance | Myelin breakdown, increased generation of ceramides and other toxic sphingolipids; lipid peroxidation; ROS | Increased neuro-inflammation, oxidative stress,
pro-apoptosis signaling, further insulin resistance |
| Insulin/IGF availability | Trophic factor withdrawal | Death or impaired function of insulin/IGF dependent neurons and glial cells |
| Hyperglycemia | Accumulation of advanced glycation end-products | Disrupts removal of Aβ42 |
Abbreviations: GLUT4=glucose transporter 4; IRS= insulin receptor substrate; PI3K= phosphoinositol-3- kinase; GSK-3β = glycogen synthase kinase 3β; GAPDH=glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase; ROS=reactive oxygen species; RNS=reactive nitrogen species; AβPP= amyloid-β - precursor protein; Aβ 42=amyloid beta peptide-42 amino acids 1-42 cleavage product; IGF=insulin-like growth factor.
Neuropathologic Processes Contributing to Brain Insulin Resistance in Alzheimer's Disease
| Neurodegenerative Disease Process | Mechanism of impairing brain insulin signaling | Consequences in relation to brain insulin signaling |
|---|---|---|
| Aβ42 toxicity | Competes with insulin and reduces affinity of
insulin binding to its receptor | Disrupts insulin signaling |
| Microvascular disease | Cerebral hypoperfusion, hypoxic-ischemic injury | Exacerbates insulin resistance; |
| Oxidative stress | DNA damage, lipid peroxidation, fibrillarization of oligomeric tau and Aβ42 | Increases neuro-inflammation and pro-inflammatory
cytokine inhibition of insulin signaling |
| Transition metal ion accumulations | Mitochondrial dysfunction, oxidative stress, tau and AβPP oligomer fibrillarization | Impairs glucose uptake and utilization, inhibits insulin signaling |
| Hyperphosphorylated-ubiquitinated tau | Increases oxidative stress, promotes neuro-inflammation | Enhances insulin resistance |
Abbreviations: PI3K= phosphoinositol-3- kinase; GSK-3β = glycogen synthase kinase 3β; AβPP= amyloid-β - precursor protein; Aβ 42=amyloid beta peptide-42 amino acids 1-42 cleavage product
Therapeutic Targets for Alzheimer's Disease Based on Metabolic Hypothesis
| Target | Agent | Mechanism of Action |
|---|---|---|
| Glutamate excitotoxicity | NMDA glutamatergic receptor antoginist | Helps restore brain metabolic functions |
| Cholinergic deficiency | Acetylcholinesterase inhibitor | May stimulate production of trophic factors, e.g IGF-1; protects against glutamate neurotoxicity; activates PI3K-Akt, promoting neuronal survival |
| Aβ42 accumulation and fibrillarization | Gamma secretase inhibitor drugs (Notch sparing); BACE1 inhibitors to reduce cleavage and production of toxic peptides | Reduces insulin resistance, enhances PI3K-Akt signaling; reduces GSK-3β activity resulting in decreased tau phosphorylation |
| Tau hyperphosphorylation | GSK-3β and protein phosphatase 2A inhibitors | Reduces oxidative stress, helps restore insulin responsiveness |
| Insulin deficiency | Insulin therapy-intranasal | Maintains survival and function of cells requiring insulin stimulation; supports glucose uptake, brain metabolism and neuronal plasticity; Decreases AβPP burden and tau hyperphosphorylation; Enhances cognition |
| Hyperglycemia | Antihyperglycemic agents-biguanides | Enhance glucose uptake and insulin receptor sensitivity |
| Insulin resistance | Insulin sensitizers, e.g. PPAR agonists | Enhance glucose uptake and insulin receptor sensitivity; anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidant properties |
| Oxidative stress and Neuro-inflammation | Anti-oxidants | Help restore insulin sensitivity and glucose
utilization |
Abbreviations: BACE1=beta site AβPP cleaving enzyme 1; GLP-1=glucagon-like peptide-1; NMDA= N-methyl-D-aspartate; PPAR= peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor; PI3K= phosphoinositol-3- kinase; GSK-3β = glycogen synthase kinase 3β; AβPP= amyloid-β - precursor protein; Aβ 42=amyloid beta peptide-42 amino acids 1-42 cleavage product; IGF=insulin-like growth factor