| Literature DB >> 26136647 |
Gaurav Bedse1, Fabio Di Domenico2, Gaetano Serviddio3, Tommaso Cassano4.
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia affecting elderly people. AD is a multifaceted pathology characterized by accumulation of extracellular neuritic plaques, intracellular neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) and neuronal loss mainly in the cortex and hippocampus. AD etiology appears to be linked to a multitude of mechanisms that have not been yet completely elucidated. For long time, it was considered that insulin signaling has only peripheral actions but now it is widely accepted that insulin has neuromodulatory actions in the brain. Insulin signaling is involved in numerous brain functions including cognition and memory that are impaired in AD. Recent studies suggest that AD may be linked to brain insulin resistance and patients with diabetes have an increased risk of developing AD compared to healthy individuals. Indeed insulin resistance, increased inflammation and impaired metabolism are key pathological features of both AD and diabetes. However, the precise mechanisms involved in the development of AD in patients with diabetes are not yet fully understood. In this review we will discuss the role played by aberrant brain insulin signaling in AD. In detail, we will focus on the role of insulin signaling in the deposition of neuritic plaques and intracellular NFTs. Considering that insulin mitigates beta-amyloid deposition and phosphorylation of tau, pharmacological strategies restoring brain insulin signaling, such as intranasal delivery of insulin, could have significant therapeutic potential in AD treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer's disease; beta amyloid; insulin signaling; insulin-like growth factor; phosphorylated tau
Year: 2015 PMID: 26136647 PMCID: PMC4468388 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2015.00204
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Altered insulin signaling in normal aging and Alzheimer's diseases.
| Rats/hippocampus | IGF-1 | Unchanged [125I]IGF-I, [125I]IGF-II or [125I]insulin binding levels in normal aging process | Dore et al., |
| Human patients/plasma | IGF-I | ↓ plasma IGF-I levels with aging | Mustafa et al., |
| Fisher 344 × brown Norway hybrid rats/plasma and CSF | IGF-1 | ↓ mRNA and protein levels in aged animals | Ashpole et al., |
| Aged C57BL6 Mice/whole brain, serum and CSF | IGF-1 | ↓ IGF-1 levels in brain, CSF and serum in aged mice | Muller et al., |
| AD human patients/Hippocampus, cortex, and cerebellum | IGF-II | Unchanged | Kar et al., |
| AD human patients/frontal, temporal, parietal, and occipital cortex | Insulin | - Strong insulin immunoreactivity in pyramidal neurons compared to age-matched controls | Frolich et al., |
| AD human patients/frontal cortex, hippocampus, hypothalamus | Insulin | ↓ IR and IGF-1R mRNA in hippocampus and hypothalamus | Steen et al., |
| AD human patients/Plasma, serum | IGF-1 | ↑ total and unbound IGF-1 levels | Vardy et al., |
| AD human patients/CSF | Insulin | ↓ insulin in mild AD patients | Gil-Bea et al., |
| AD human patients/Temporal cortex | IGF-1R | Unaltered IR protein levels however altered its distribution in AD neurons | Moloney et al., |
| AD human brain tissue/ cynomolgus monkeys (i.c.v. injection of Aβ oligomer/AβPP-PS1 Tg mice | IRS-1 | ↑ IRS-1pSer636/639 levels in hippocampus | Bomfim et al., |
| AD human patients, triple transgenic mouse model, Cultured rat hippocampus neurons (Aβ oligomer insult) | IRS-1 | ↑ active JNK and IRS-1pSer616 levels | Ma et al., |
| AD human patients/cortex and hippocampus | Insulin | - Unchanged basal levels of insulin and IGF-1 signaling molecules | Talbot et al., |
| AD human patients/frontal cortex | Insulin | ↓ insulin, IGF-1 and IGF-2 receptor mRNA and polypeptide mRNA in AD | Rivera et al., |
| Hippocampal and cortical neuronal cultures S.D. | IR Tyr phosphorylation | Soluble Aβ oligomer inhibits IR activity (IR Tyr phosphorylation) | Zhao et al., |
| AD human patients/plasma | IGF-1 | ↓ plasma IGF-1 level in familial AD patients carrying the swedish AβPP 670/671 mutation | Mustafa et al., |
| AD human patients/serum and CSF | IGF-1 | ↑ IGF-2 in both AD serum and CSF | Tham et al., |
| AD human patients/CSF and plasma | Insulin | ↓ CSF insulin and CSF-to-plasma insulin ratio | Craft et al., |
| AD human patients/cortex | Insulin signaling | ↓ total and phosphorylated components of insulin-PI3K-Akt signaling in AD | Liu et al., |
| AD human patients/cortex and hippocampus | IRS-1 | ↑ IRS1-pS616, IRS1-pS312, Akt-pS473in AD | Yarchoan et al., |
| AD human patients/plasma | Insulin | ↑ plasma insulin after oral glucose tolerance test in AD patients | Fujisawa et al., |
| Tg2576 mice of AD | IGF | ↓ serum IGF levels | Carro et al., |
IR, insulin receptor; IGF-1R, insulin growth factor receptor 1; IGF-2R, insulin growth factor receptor 2; IRS-1, insulin receptor substrate-1; IRS-1pSer636/639, IRS-1 phosphorylated at serine residues 636/639; JNK, c-Jun N-terminal kinase; PI3K, phosphatidyl inositol 3-kinase; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid.
Figure 1Aberrant brain insulin signaling in Alzheimer's Disease (AD). Schematic outline of neuronal insulin signaling in the normal brain (A) and AD brain (B). Under physiological conditions, insulin binding to its receptor triggers phosphorylation of insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1). This results in phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) activation and downstream cellular responses that facilitate neuronal growth, neuronal survival, synaptic plasticity, learning and memory, etc. Activation of the IR can result in both vasodilatation and vasoconstriction and under physiological conditions there is a balance of both processes to regulate the immediate metabolic requirements of various tissues. In AD, accumulation of amyloid-β (Aβ) oligomers leads to increased tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) levels and activation of stress kinases such as c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) resulting in inhibitory serine phosphorylation of IRS-1 (1). Aβ oligomers cause removal of IRs from the cell surface mediated by Casein Kinase 2 (CK2) and Ca2+/Calmodulin-Dependent Kinase II (CaMKII) and redistribute them to cell bodies (2). Insulin resistance lowers the expression of Aβ-degrading insulin degrading enzyme (IDE) (3). Lowered IDE expression further decreases the availability of IDE for Aβ degradation. The reduction in brain insulin signaling increases GSK-3β activity (4), which increases abnormal tau phosphorylation. Deficient insulin signaling leads to impairment in nerve growth, synaptic plasticity, learning and memory, etc. (5). Aberrant phosphorylation of IRS causes an imbalance in homeostatic regulation of vascular function (6). This decreased production of NO may results in decreased cerebral blood flow and increased pro-inflammatory cytokines and reactive oxygen species production.
Intranasal insulin improves memory function.
| Healthy humans | 4 × 40 IU/day, for 8 weeks | Intranasal intake of insulin enhanced long-term declarative memory and positively affected mood in humans without causing systemic side effects like hypoglycaemia. | Benedict et al., |
| Healthy humans | 4 × 40 IU/day, for 8 weeks; insulin and rapid-acting insulin analog insulin aspart | Declarative memory was improved in insulin and insulin aspart groups compared to placebo group without altering glucose levels. | Benedict et al., |
| Healthy humans | Single dose of regular human insulin 160 IU | Hippocampus-dependent memory and working memory were improved in women where as men did not benefit from acute insulin treatment | Benedict et al., |
| MCI and mild AD patients | 20 or 40 IU of insulin acute treatment | Acute intranasal insulin administration improved verbal memory in AD and MCI subjects without the APOE- ε 4 allele | Reger et al., |
| MCI and AD patients | 10, 20, 40, or 60 IU for 5 days | 10, 20, and 40 IU of insulin improved declarative memory only in APOE-ε 4 negative patients | Reger et al., |
| MCI and AD patients | 20 IU BID intranasal insulin treatment for 21 days | Insulin-treated subjects retained more verbal information and improved attention and functional status | Reger et al., |
| MCI and mild to moderate AD patients | 20 or 40 IU for 4 months | Treatment with 20 IU of insulin improved delayed memory | Craft et al., |
| AD patients with ApoE4 allels | Rapid acting insulin | Rapid acting insulin failed to have an acute impact on cognition in ApoE4 carriers with AD | Rosenbloom et al., |
| MCI and mild AD patients | 20 or 40 IU of insulin detemir for 21 days | High dose (40 IU) improved visuospatial and verbal working memory for all participant | Claxton et al., |
| S.D. rats—streptozotocin induced AD model | 5 IU for 6 days | Insulin administration significantly reduced the Aβ levels without altering peripheral glucose levels | Subramanian and John, |
| Streptozotocin induced-rat model of type | 2U insulin intranasally/4 weeks | Decreased Akt activation and increased tau phosphorylation and GSK-3β activation was found in T2D rat brains. | Yang et al., |
| 3 × Tg-AD mice | 1.75 U/7 days | Intranasal insulin administration restored insulin signaling, ↑ synaptic proteins, and ↓ Aβ40 level and microglia activation in the brains of 3 × Tg-AD mice. | Chen et al., |
| 3 × Tg-AD mice | 1.75 U/7 days | Insulin treatment attenuated propofol-induced hyperphosphorylation of tau, promoted brain insulin signaling. | Chen et al., |