| Literature DB >> 26967215 |
Abstract
Numerous studies have documented a strong association between diabetes and Alzheimer's disease (AD). The nature of the relationship, however, has remained a puzzle, in part because of seemingly incongruent findings. For example, some studies have concluded that insulin deficiency is primarily at fault, suggesting that intranasal insulin or inhibiting the insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE) could be beneficial. Other research has concluded that hyperinsulinemia is to blame, which implies that intranasal insulin or the inhibition of IDE would exacerbate the disease. Such antithetical conclusions pose a serious obstacle to making progress on treatments. However, careful integration of multiple strands of research, with attention to the methods used in different studies, makes it possible to disentangle the research on AD. This integration suggests that there is an important relationship between insulin, IDE, and AD that yields multiple pathways to AD depending on the where deficiency or excess in the cycle occurs. I review evidence for each of these pathways here. The results suggest that avoiding excess insulin, and supporting robust IDE levels, could be important ways of preventing and lessening the impact of AD. I also describe what further tests need to be conducted to verify the arguments made in the paper, and their implications for treating AD.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer disease; amylin; amyloid beta-peptide; dementia; diabetes mellitus; insulin; insulysin; metalloproteases; neprilysin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26967215 PMCID: PMC4927856 DOI: 10.3233/JAD-150980
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Alzheimers Dis ISSN: 1387-2877 Impact factor: 4.472
Review of literature pertaining to the insulin, insulin degrading enzyme, and Alzheimer’s pathways
| Citation | Year | Type | Findings |
| Ott et al., 1996 [ | 1996 | Large population study | 6330 participants between 55–90, 11.4% had diabetes at baseline. Of those with dementia, 22.3% had diabetes (1.3 fold increase). In particular, a very strong relationship was found between dementia, and diabetes when treated with insulin (3.2 fold increase). |
| Leibson et al., 1997 [ | 1997 | Longitudinal cohort study | DM was associated with an increased risk of all dementia (1.66 fold), and AD (2.27 for men, 1.37 for women). |
| Ott et al., 1999 [ | 1999 | Longitudinal cohort study | Finds that diabetes almost double the risk of dementia (1.9 RR) and AD (1.9 RR). Patients treated with insulin were at the highest risk of dementia (4.3 RR) |
| Stewart and Liolitsa, 1999 [ | 1999 | Review | |
| Luchsinger et al., 2001 [ | 2001 | Longitudinal cohort study | Study of Black and Hispanic cohort for average of 4.3 years suggested that diabetes (baseline rate of 20%) led to a 1.3 fold increase in AD, a 1.6 fold increase in AD or cognitive impairment without dementia (without stroke). |
| Peila et al., 2002 [ | 2002 | Longitudinal cohort study and postmortems | 2,574 Japanese-American men enrolled in study and 216 underwent autopsy.35% were diabetic at baseline. Found that Type 2 diabetes was associated with higher rates of total dementia (1.5 fold), AD (1.8 fold), and vascular dementia (2.3 fold). Those that also had ApoE4 allele had a 5.5 fold risk for AD compared to those with neither risk factor. Risk of neurofibrillary tangles was much higher in presence of both diabetes and ApoE4 allele than with either alone, suggesting an interactive effect. |
| MacKnight et al., 2002 [ | 2002 | Longitudinal cohort study | 5,574 subjects of Canadian Study of Health and Aging, Average age of 74; diabetes (baseline rate of 12.1%) found to increase rate of vascular dementia but not AD. |
| Arvanitakis et al., 2004 [ | 2004 | Longitudinal cohort study | Uses cognitive testing to determine AD. Finds that diabetes increases risk of AD by 1.65 fold and increases rate of decline. Found no relationship between diabetes and stroke. |
| Xu et al., 2004 [ | 2004 | Longitudinal cohort study | Diabetes increased the risk of dementia 1.5 fold (1.6 vascular dementia, 1.3 AD). Treatment with oral antidiabetic medications increased risk to 1.7. |
| Rivera et al., 2005 [ | 2005 | Postmortems | Finds that AD brains exhibit lower levels of mRNA for insulin, IGF-1, and IGFII polypeptides and their receptors |
| Akomolafe et al., 2006 [ | 2006 | Longitudinal cohort study | Finds that can only detect that DM increases risk of dementia when looking at groups that are not already at high risk due to ApoE4, etc. (At baseline, finds that 9.13 % have diabetes and 22–24% have ApoE4.) |
| Arvanitakis et al., 2007 [ | 2006 | Longitudinal cohort study | Diabetes was associated with increased risk of cerebral infarction (2.47 fold), but not to increased global AD score. However, subjects had a mean age of 86, “Nearly all subjects had at least some AD pathology: the mean composite measure of AD pathology was 0.71 (SD 0.65; range 0 to 2.88).” Furthermore, sample only had a baseline diabetes rate of 15%. Those without diabetes had a higher ratio of ApoE4 (31%) versus those with diabetes (26%). |
| Schneider et al., 2007 [ | 2007 | Postmortems compared to diagnoses | The majority of older persons have one or more brain pathologies; those with dementia most often have multiple brain pathologies. |
| Schneider et al., 2009 [ | 2009 | Postmortems | Of the 179 people with probable AD, 87.7% were pathologically confirmed to have AD, and 45.8% had mixed pathologies. Of the 134 with MCI, 54.4 % were pathologically confirmed to have AD, and 19.4% had mixed pathologies. |
| Talbot et al., 2012 [ | 2012 | Postmortems | Brain insulin resistance was strongly associated with episodic and working memory deficits, even after controlling for Aβ plaques, neurofibrillary tangles, and ApoE4. |
| Fujisawa et al., 1991 [ | 1991 | People with AD had significantly higher insulin levels in the cerebrospinal fluid both under fasting conditions and in response to a glucose tolerance test. | |
| Razay and Wilcock, 1994 [ | 1994 | Women with AD had higher plasma insulin, higher glucose, and higher body mass index than controls. The differences were not significant for men. | |
| Ott et al., 1996 [ | 1996 | Large population study | 6330 participants between 55–90; 11.4% had diabetes at baseline. Of those with dementia, 22.3% had diabetes (1.3 fold increase). In particular, a very strong relationship was found between dementia, and diabetes when treated with insulin (3.2 fold increase). |
| Ott et al., 1999 [ | 1999 | Longitudinal cohort study | Finds that diabetes almost double the risk of dementia (1.9 RR) and AD (1.9 RR). Patients treated with insulin were at the highest risk of dementia (4.3 RR). |
| Carantoni et al., 2000 [ | 2000 | Non-diabetic patients with vascular dementia or AD had significantly higher fasting glucose and insulin levels than healthy controls. | |
| Luchsinger et al., 2004 [ | 2004 | Longitudinal cohort study | 683 elderly persons were followed over time. Finds that the risk of AD attributable to the presence of hyperinsulinemia or diabetes is 39%. |
| Fishel et al., 2005 [ | 2005 | Concludes that moderate hyperinsulinemia can elevate inflammatory markets and Aβ42 in the periphery and the brain, thereby increasing the risk of AD. | |
| Reger et al., 2006 [ | 2006 | Moderate amounts of intranasal insulin improved some measures of memory in individuals without ApoE4 allele, but impaired performance on some measures of memory in individuals with ApoE4 allele. | |
| Pedersen et al., 2006 [ | 2006 | Rosiglitazone (an insulin sensitizer) attenuated memory deficits in Tg2576 Alzheimer mice. It appeared to work by lowing glucocorticoid levels (chronically high glucocorticoids have previously been shown to reduce IDE mRNA in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus, and to reduce IDE activity in the whole hippocampus). | |
| Young et al., 2006 [ | 2006 | Finds that hyperinsulinemia was associated with a significantly lower baseline of delayed word recall, digit symbol subtest, and first letter word fluency. Furthermore, those with hyperinsulinemia had a greater decline over six years in delayed word recall and word fluency. | |
| Reger et al., 2008 [ | 2008 | 25 adults with AD or mild cognitive impairment (and NOT diabetes) were assigned randomly to receive intranasal insulin or a placebo. Moderate amounts of intranasal insulin (20 IU) improved immediate recall in older adults with AD or mild cognitive impairment, but not longer term recall. At higher levels of intranasal insulin (40 IU or 60 IU) performance declined to levels below those of placebo. Furthermore, subjects who had the ApoE4 allele showed poorer performance than all other subjects, and that performance did not get better with intranasal insulin. | |
| de la Monte, 2012 [ | 2012 | Review | |
| Craft et al., 2012 [ | 2012 | Finds positive effects of intranasal insulin on memory impaired adults. Again, results more reliably positive for moderate dose (20 IU). | |
| Freiherr et al., 2013 [ | 2013 | Review | Concludes that insulin has neuroprotective effect. |
| Zhao et al., 2004 [ | 2004 | Higher levels of insulin resulted in higher levels of IDE protein; insulin –>PI3 kinase –>upregulates IDE (**HOWEVER, it appeared that at very high levels of insulin, it did not continue to increase IDE: 20, 200, and 500 nM; 155.81±14.49% relative to control at 20 nM, 167.86±25.02 at 200 nM, and 157.69±29.39 at 500 nM); IDE levels lower in AD brains; IDE lowest with two copies of ApoE4 allele; second lowest with one copy of ApoE4 allele. | |
| Jolivalt et al., 2010 [ | 2010 | Streptozotocin was used to induce T1DM in mice. Mice who had T1DM performed worse than wild type mice; mice who had both T1DM and AD (APP mice) performed the worst. Brain assays verified increased plaques. Note: T1DM x APP mice expressed significantly less IDE. “IDE upregulation requires insulin-mediated Akt activation (Zhao et al., 2004a). Therefore, insulin deficiency and a decreased signaling via the PI3K pathway may contribute to decreased IDE expression and thus contribute to increased Aβ protein levels as a result of a reduced degradation.” (pg. 428) | |
| Kochkina et al., 2015 [ | 2015 | Inducing Type 1 diabetes via streptozotocin caused IDE to go up in liver and striatum, but down in cortex and hippocampus (cortex and hippocampus are the regions where AD effects first begin to show). | |
| Kuo et al., 1991 [ | 1991 | IDE breaks down insulin | |
| Kurochkin and Goto, 1994 [ | 1994 | IDE (rat) breaks down Aβ; acidification significantly inhibits IDE’s breakdown of Aβ; Aβ links to IDE so fast that is hard to label IDE in presence of Aβ. | |
| Qiu et al., 1996 [ | 1996 | Aβ is broken down by a metalloprotease. | |
| Hamazaki, 1996 [ | 1996 | Cathepsin D purified from rat brain hydrolyzed Aβ. | |
| McDermott and Gibson, 1997 [ | 1997 | IDE breaks down Aβ. | |
| Qiu et al., 1998 [ | 1998 | IDE breaks down Aβ. | |
| Kurochkin, 1998 [ | 1998 | Review | IDE acts on peptides that share an ability to form amyloid fibrils. |
| Bennett et al., 2000 [ | 2000 | IDE degrades amylin; insulin inhibited amylin in a dose-dependent manner and insulin degradation was also inhibited by amylin. Excess insulin also inhibits its own degradation. “Normally, a balance exists between deposition and degradation of the amyloidogenic peptide. When the levels of the peptide exceed the capacity of IDE to degrade them, either by increased expression of the peptide, or decreased expression or enzymatic activity of IDE, the balance is shifted from degradation to deposition. In the case of Type 2 diabetes, both insulin and amylin secretion are increased due to peripheral insulin resistance. Because IDE has approximately 4-fold greater affinity for insulin than for amylin, amylin degradation will be proportionately impaired.” | |
| Perez et al., 2000 [ | 2000 | IDE breaks down Aβ and Aβ analogs; IDE breakdown of Aβ inhibited by excess insulin; Aβ also inhibits breakdown of insulin but is less potent than the reverse. | |
| Vekrellis et al., 2000 [ | 2000 | IDE breaks down Aβ. | |
| Farris et al., 2003 [ | 2003 | IDE knockout mice had a greater than 50% decrease in Aβ degradation in both brain membrane fractions and primary neuronal cultures and a similar deficit in insulin degradation in liver. The mice showed an increase in cerebral accumulation of endogenous Aβ (characteristic of AD), hyperinsulinemia, and glucose intolerance. Ergo IDE dysfunction may underlie both AD and T2DM. | |
| Leissring et al., 2003 [ | 2003 | Upregulation of either neprilysin or IDE (via genetic modification) lessened the mortality of APP mice, and increased Aβ degradation. Furthermore, the proteases acted upon the soluble, monomeric Aβ species prior to over deposition. The authors note that “the vast majority of Aβ-degrading activity in these brain membrane samples is attributable to IDE” IDE decreased both soluble and insoluble Aβ, and “ ... relatively small changes in the activity of IDE and other Aβ-degrading proteases can dramatically impact steady-state cerebral Aβ levels, suggesting that modest increases in proteolytic clearance of Aβ in humans might be sufficient to effect significant changes in the overall economy of brain Aβ” Also, “chronic neuronal overexpression of IDE or NEP beginning postnatally did not itself have obvious deleterious consequences.” | |
| Farris et al., 2004 [ | 2004 | Partial loss-of-function mutations in the IDE gene can impair regulation of Aβ levels without early debilitating dementia, consistent with it having a potential role in late onset AD | |
| Madani et al., 2006 [ | 2006 | Neprilysin knockout mice exhibit Alzheimer’s-like behavior impairment and increased Aβ deposits. | |
| de Tullio et al., 2008 [ | 2008 | Aβ binds to IDE very strongly. | |
| Miners et al., 2011 [ | 2011 | Review | Neprilysin (NEP), insulin-degrading enzyme, and endothelin-converting enzyme reduce Aβ levels and protect against cognitive impairment in mouse models of AD. |
| Steneberg et al., 2013 [ | 2013 | Deficiency in IDE leads to deficiency in insulin because IDE is needed to replenish the pool of insulin granules. “We find that glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) is decreased in Ide KO mice due to impaired replenishment of the releasable pool of granules and that the Ide gene is haploinsufficient.” Also finds that alpha synuclein and IDE levels are inversely correlated, and finds evidence that alpha synuclein suppresses insulin secretion. | |
| Quan et al., 2013 [ | 2013 | Ginsenoside Rg1 upregulates proliferator-activated receptor y (PPARy); PPAR | |
| Vingtdeux et al., 2015 [ | 2015 | CALHM1 potentiates IDE activity, facilitating degradation of Aβ. Calhm1 knockout mice had roughly a 50% increase in endogenous Aβ concentrations in the whole brain and primary neurons. | |
| Sharma et al., 2015 [ | 2015 | IDE binds to alpha synuclein oligomers, thereby preventing them from forming amyloids. Furthermore, the presence of alpha synuclein intensified IDE’s proteolytic activity on another fluorogenic substrate, “substrate V.” The researchers also found that adding APP to the mix competitively inhibited the breakdown of “substrate V.” | |
| Qui et al., 1998 [ | 1998 | Finds that IDE is secreted endogeneously by the microglial cell line (suggesting that it is IDE that breaks down Aβ rather than other potential proteases). Also demonstrates that 110-kDA IDE was present in fresh lumbar CSF obtained from living patients, indicating that this protease exists extracellularly under | |
| Perez et al., 2000 [ | 2000 | IDE breaks down Aβ and Aβ analogs; IDE breakdown of Aβ inhibited by excess insulin; Aβ also inhibits breakdown of insulin but is less potent than the reverse. | |
| Bennett, et al., 2000 [ | 2000 | IDE degrades amylin; insulin inhibited amylin in a dose-dependent manner and insulin degradation was also inhibited by amylin. Excess insulin also inhibits its own degradation. “Normally, a balance exists between deposition and degradation of the amyloidogenic peptide. When the levels of the peptide exceed the capacity of IDE to degrade them, either by increased expression of the peptide, or decreased expression or enzymatic activity of IDE, the balance is shifted from degradation to deposition. In the case of Type 2 diabetes, both insulin and amylin secretion are increased due to peripheral insulin resistance. Because IDE has approximately 4-fold greater affinity for insulin than for amylin, amylin degradation will be proportionately impaired.” | |
| Qiu and Folstein, 2006 [ | 2006 | Review | Reviews studies that show that insulin competitively inhibits the breakdown of Aβ. |
| Jackson et al., 2013 [ | 2013 | Postmortems | Subjects with AD and diabetes, or AD alone, both showed large amylin plaque deposits in the brain. They also found mixed amylin and Aβ plaques. “Amylin deposition in AD brains suggests undiagnosed insulin resistance in these patients, which is common to aging."(p.521) |
| Srodulski et al., 2014 [ | 2014 | Rats genetically modified to overexpress human amylin accumulated amylin oligomers in their brains and exhibited neurological deficits. | |
| Adler et al., 2014 [ | 2014 | AD and MCI patients exhibited significantly lower plasma amylin. Pramlintide injections to accelerated senescence mice improved their memory. | |
| Qiu and Zhu, 2014 [ | 2014 | Amylin and pramlintide helped reduce neurological deficits in mice that were engineered to have AD. Also found that in humans, amylin increases the Aβ42 in the blood and CSF. | |
| Zhu et al., 2015 [ | 2015 | Pramlintide improved neurological symptoms in APP mice. | |
| Oskarsson et al., 2015 [ | 2015 | Amylin fibrils promote an increase in the formation of amylin fibrils (self-reinforced seeding). Also found that amylin fibrils cross-seeded Aβ fibrils, and amylin and Aβ were found to be colocalized in plaques in AD patient brains. | |
| Lutz and Meyer, 2015 [ | 2015 | Review | Discusses the similarities between amylin and Aβ, and reviews research suggesting that amyloid may constitute a “second amyloid” that plays an important role in neurodegenerative disorders. |
| Giasson et al., 2003 [ | 2003 | Review | Alpha synuclein readily self-polymerizes; tau does not. However, Giasson et al demonstrated ( |
| Yin et al., 2007 [ | 2007 | APP mutations enhance the preference of | |
| Morale et al., 2009 [ | 2009 | Review | The infectious agent in prion disease is thought to be the misfolded protein structure. Because this misfolded protein structure is also common to the other amyloid proteins, they may be infectious as well. |
| Morales et al., 2009 [ | 2009 | Review | Morales et al. review considerable evidence (epidemiological, |
| Oskarsson et al., 2015 [ | 2015 | Amylin fibrils promote an increase in the formation of amylin fibrils (self-reinforced seeding). Also found that amylin fibrils cross-seeded Aβ fibrils, and amylin and Aβ were found to be colocalized in plaques in AD patient brains. | |
| Farris et al., 2003 [ | 2003 | IDE knockout mice exhibit hyperinsulinemia, glucose intolerance, and increased Aβ. | |
| Abdul-Hay et al., 2011 [ | 2011 | Although Ide (-/-) mice have elevated insulin levels, they exhibit impaired, rather than improved, glucose tolerance that may arise from compensatory insulin signaling dysfunction. | |
| Deprez-Poulain et al., 2015 [ | 2015 | Inhibiting IDE results in glucose intolerance. | |
| Kurochkin and Goto, 1994 [ | 1994 | IDE (rat) breaks down Aβ; acidification significantly inhibits IDE’s breakdown of Aβ. | |
| Perez et al., 2000 [ | 2000 | Bacitracin, phenanthroline, and N0ethylmaleimide each inhibit IDE. | |
| Cook et al., 2003 [ | 2003 | ApoE4 associated with reduced IDE expression. | |
| Zhao et al., 2004 [ | 2004 | ApoE4 associated with reduced IDE expression. | |
| Zhao et al., 2009 [ | 2009 | It is not well understood what promotes IDE secretion. | |
| Cordes et al., 2009 [ | 2009 | Nitric Oxide inhibits insulin degrading enzyme. | |
| Yin et al., 2012 [ | 2012 | Geniposide promotes IDE breakdown of Aβ; bacitracin inhibits insulin degrading enzyme. | |
| Quan et al., 2013 [ | 2013 | Ginsenoside Rg1 upregulates proliferator-activated receptor y (PPARy); PPAR | |
Fig.1The insulin-protease-amyloid degradation pathway and its potential malfunctions.