| Literature DB >> 30072954 |
Carola Rotermund1, Gerrit Machetanz2, Julia C Fitzgerald1,2.
Abstract
The search for treatments for neurodegenerative diseases is a major concern in light of today's aging population and an increasing burden on individuals, families, and society. Although great advances have been made in the last decades to understand the underlying genetic and biological cause of these diseases, only some symptomatic treatments are available. Metformin has long since been used to treat Type 2 Diabetes and has been shown to be beneficial in several other conditions. Metformin is well-tested in vitro and in vivo and an approved compound that targets diverse pathways including mitochondrial energy production and insulin signaling. There is growing evidence for the benefits of metformin to counteract age-related diseases such as cancer, cardiovascular disease, and neurodegenerative diseases. We will discuss evidence showing that certain neurodegenerative diseases and diabetes are explicitly linked and that metformin along with other diabetes drugs can reduce neurological symptoms in some patients and reduce disease phenotypes in animal and cell models. An interesting therapeutic factor might be how metformin is able to balance survival and death signaling in cells through pathways that are commonly associated with neurodegenerative diseases. In healthy neurons, these overarching signals keep energy metabolism, oxidative stress, and proteostasis in check, avoiding the dysfunction and neuronal death that defines neurodegenerative disease. We will discuss the biological mechanisms involved and the relevance of neuronal vulnerability and potential difficulties for future trials and development of therapies.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer's disease; Parkinson's disease; aging; diabetes; metformin; mitochondria; neurodegeneration
Year: 2018 PMID: 30072954 PMCID: PMC6060268 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2018.00400
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Timeline of major advances in the treatment of Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease in the last century. AADC, Aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase; AChE, Acetylcholinesterase; GLP-1, Glucagone-like Peptide 1; HCL, Hydrochloride; MAO-B, Monoamine oxidase B; NMDAR, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate Receptor.
Studies investigating the effect of metformin on neurodegeneration in rodent models.
| ( | B6, Dat-Cre AMPKb1/2 KO | Day 20 + 22: | M | 8–10 weeks | 100 mg/kg/day | 27 days | Met decreases MPTP-induced loss of TH-positive neurons in ST but not SN and reduces astrogliosis | |
| ( | C57BL | Day 1+2: | M | ? | 150 mg/kg/day | 7 days | Met has no effect on MPTP-induced loss of TH-positive neurons in SN but reduces levels of microglia marker Iba1 | |
| ( | C57BL/6N | Day 7: | M | 8 weeks | 200 or 400 mg/kg/day, | 14 days | Met reduces MPTP-induced loss of TH-positive neurons in SN | |
| ( | C57BL/6 | Day 1–7: | M | 10 weeks | 200 mg/kg/day | Met ameliorates MPTP-induced motoric deficits | ||
| ( | C57BL/6 | 5 weeks: every 3.5 day; MPTP: 20 mg/kg + 250 mg/kg probenecid | M | 10 weeks | 5 mg/ml | 5 weeks | Met decreases MPTP-induced loss of TH-positive neurons in SN and reduces levels of inflammatory cytokines | |
| ( | Swiss Albino Mice | Day 1–5: MPTP: 25 mg/kg + 250 mg/kg probenecid | M | ? | 500 mg/kg/day | 21 days | Met improves regeneration of MPTP-induced motoric deficits | |
| ( | C57BL/6N | None | F | 10 weeks | A: 5 g/kg Diet | A: 1 month | A: | Met reduces protein levels of phosphorylated α-Synuclein in mouse brains |
| ( | C57BL/6J | Day 1: MDMA 20mg/kg | M | 3 months | 200–400 mg/kg/day | 3/8 days | Met reduces MDMA-induced loss of TH-positive neurons in SN and CPu | |
| ( | P301S tau transgenic C57BL/6 | Transgenic, tau mutation | m | 4 weeks | 2 mg/ml | 4 months | Met reduces Ser262-tau phosphorylation in CX and Hip but increases number of tau inclusions | |
| ( | db/db mice (BKS.Cg-m+/+ Leprdb/J) | Transgenic, leptin receptor mutation | M | 6 weeks | 200 mg/kg/day | 6 weeks | Met decreases 125I-Ab1−40 influx and RAGE expression at the BBB in db/db mice | |
| ( | Wildtype | None | ? | ? | 5 mg/ml | 16–24 days | Met reduces Ser202- and Ser262-tau phosphorylation in mouse brains | |
| ( | db/db mice | Transgenic, leptin receptor mutation | m | 7 weeks | 200 mg/kg/day | 18 weeks | Met has no effect on spatial learning and memory | |
| ( | C57BL/6J | None | 5 weeks | 2 mg/ml | 1 week | Met increases BACE-1 and APP protein levels and induces AMPK phosphorylation in mouse brains | ||
| ( | C57BL/6 | HFD (60% fat) | M | 12 months | 1% Diet | 6 months | Met attenuates HFD-induced deficits in motor function and memory | |
| ( | NIH Swiss mice | HFD (45% fat) | M | 6-8 weeks | 300 mg/kg BW | 20 days | Met does not improve HFD-induced cognitive deficits and has no effect on astrogliosis | |
| ( | Wistar rats | HFD (45% fat) | M | ? | 144 mg/kg | 10 weeks | Met has no effect on HFD-induces deficits in Matching To Position Test | |
| ( | Wistar rats | HFD (59.28% fat) | M | 6 weeks HFD | 15 mg/kg 2x/day | Met reduces HFD-induced memory deficits | ||
| ( | C57BL/6J | None | M | 4/11/22 months | 2 mg/ml | 3 months | Met has no effect or even impairs spatial memory | |
| ( | R6/2- B6CBAF1/J | Transgenic, huntingtin mutation (136-151 CAG repeats) | M/F | 5 weeks | 2 or 5 mg/ml | Around 10 weeks (until death) | Met (2 mg) increases survival time in male mice but has no effect on female mice | |
| ( | B6SJL-TgNSOD1G93A | Transgenic, SOD1 Mutation (G93A) | M/F | 5 weeks | Around 16 weeks (until death) | Met has negative effect on start of neurological symptoms and disease progression in female mice and has no effect in males | ||
BBB, Blood Brain Barrier; BW, Body weight; CPu, Caudate Putamen; CX, Cortex; HFD, High-fat diet; Hip, Hippocampus; KO, Knock-Out; MDMA, 3,4-Methylendioxy-N-methylamphetamine; Met, Metformin; MPTP, 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine; SN, Substantia Nigra; ST, Striatum; TH, Tyrosine Hydroxylase.
If the original article did not contain information about age, body weight was indicated.
Studies evaluating the effect of metformin on incidence and progression of neurodegenerative diseases.
| ( | PD | Retrospective cohort study, 800,000 individuals of whom 61,166 were diabetics, among the latter 41,003 received OAA therapy | Higher PD incidence for patients with T2DM without (HR 2.18) and with (HR 1.30) OAA compared to controls. HR for treatment with metformin alone was lower (0.95) than for sulfonylurea alone (1.57) and the combination showed the lowest HR (0.78) |
| ( | PD | Population-based retrospective cohort study with 93,349 T2DM patients receiving metformin (FU of 657,537 patient years) and 8,346 T2DM patients receiving glitazones with or without metformin (FU of 69,338 patient years) | Incidence of PD significantly lower in T2DM receiving glitazones compared to those receiving metformin (HR 0.72), no incident PD in long-term glitazone users who were still taking glitazones |
| ( | PD | Population-based retrospective cohort study with 41,362 patients receiving metformin alone, 316,210 patients receiving simvastatin alone, and 52,311 receiving both, metformin and simvastatin | Lower incidence of PD for patients receiving simvastatin alone (HR 0,64) or in combination with metformin (HR 0.74) compared to metformin alone |
| ( | PD/Dementia | Retrospective cohort study, 4,651 patients with T2DM with metformin treatment, 4,651 patients with T2DM with metformin treatment; >21,000 person-years of FU | Higher incidence density for PD (HR 2.27), AD (2.13), and VD (2.30) in the metformin group compared to those in the non-metformin group |
| ( | Dementia | Retrospective cohort study, 127,209 dementia-free individuals aged ≥50 years, of which 25,939 w/T2DM, 1,864 w/Metformin only, 9,257 w/Sulfonylureas + Metformin | Higher incidence of dementia in T2DM than controls, higher incidence in T2DM wo/ OAA compared to sulfonylurea (HR 0.85), metformin (HR 0.76), or a combination of metformin and sulfonylurea (HR 0.65) |
| ( | Dementia | 67,731 non-demented, nondiabetic individuals aged ≥65 years observed for 5 years and observation of onset of T2DM, antidiabetic medication and dementia | Increased risk of dementia onset for new-onset T2DM compared to non-T2DM (HR 1.56), risk to develop dementia was higher for thiazolidinedione users than for sulfonylurea and metformin |
| ( | Dementia | 189,858 individuals with 122,036 receiving metformin and 67,822 not receiving metformin, dementia incidence rate per 1,000 person-years | Patients with diabetes taking metformin had significantly lower dementia incidence rates than those not taking metformin (21.79 vs. 31.58 per 1,000 person-years, |
| ( | Dementia | Meta-analysis including 544,093 participants, risk of dementia in patients with T2DM taking insulin sensitizers | Incidence of dementia reduced with metformin (RR 0.79) compared to those not taking insulin sensitizer but not significant ( |
| ( | Dementia | Latent class analysis to identify subgroups with differential effect of metformin on risk of age related comorbidities in 41,204 men with T2DM with 8,393 metformin users, | Identified 4 latent classes of patients who showed different effects of metformin on risk to develop ARC including dementia |
| ( | Dementia | Retrospective cohort study, 17,200 new metformin users vs. 11,440 new sulfonylurea users aged ≥65 years, average FU 5 years | Individuals <75 years of age on metformin had a lower risk to develop dementia than those on sulfonylurea (HR 0.67, 95% CI 0.61–0.73) |
| ( | Cognitive impairment | Longitudinal population-based study, 365 persons aged ≥55 years with T2DM of which 204 received metformin | Metformin use inversely associated with cognitive impairment (OR 0.49), longer use associated with lower risk of cognitive impairment |
| ( | AD | Retrospective case-control study, 7,086 AD patients and controls were compared for previous use of metformin/other antidiabetic drugs | Higher risk to develop AD for longterm users of metformin (AOR 1.71) but not sulfonylurea (AOR 1.01), thiazolidinediones (AOR 0.87), or insulin (AOR 1.01) compared to non-users |
| ( | AD | 71,433 patients newly diagnosed with diabetes and 71,311 nondiabetic controls, follow up of up to 11 years | Higher incidence of AD in diabetic patients compared to non-diabetics (0.48 vs. 0.38%), no positive effect of anti-hyperglycemic treatment on risk |
| ( | AD | Randomized placebo-controlled crossover study, 20 nondiabetic patients with MCI or mild dementia and AD received mg metformin or placebo for 8 weeks and then switched to the other treatment for 8 weeks | Metformin was measurable in CSF, in pooled post-hoc analysis significant increase in superior and middle orbitofrontal CBF after 8 weeks metformin exposure in ASL-MRI, significant improvement in Trail making test part B, a measure of executive function |
| ( | HD | Observational study; 4325 HD patients, of which 121 had T2DM and received metformin | HD patients on metformin fared better in test for verbal and executive function but not in motor assessments |
AD, Alzheimer's disease; AOR, adjusted Odds Ratio; ARC, age related comorbidities; ASL-MRI, Arterial Spin Label Magnetic Resonance Imaging; CBF, Cerebral Blood Flow; FU, Follow-up; HD, Huntington's disease; HR, Hazard ratio; MCI, Mild cognitive impairment; OAA, Oral anti-hyperglycemic agents; PD, Parkinson's disease; T2DM, Type 2 Diabetes; VD, Vascular dementia.
Figure 2Metformin's potential as a neuroprotective agent. Metformin can counteract protein hyperphosphorylation, oxidative stress and neuroinflammation, processes known to drive neurodegeneration. Metformin can act on neurons, but also targets astrocytes and microglia. Consequently, metformin can influence inflammatory status, along with glucose metabolism in the entire brain and thereby reduce neuroinflammation and act as an antioxidant, leading to protein dephosphorylation. PPP, Pentose phosphate pathway.
Figure 3Cellular targets of metformin. Metformin inhibits mitochondrial complex I, thereby increasing AMP/ATP ratio. This lack of energy leads to an activation of AMPK, which, amongst others, inhibits mTor signaling. Furthermore, metformin can activate PP2A and inhibit neuroinflammatory processes. Results of these events are reduced production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and reactive oxygen species (ROS), decreased oxidative stress, inhibition of protein synthesis and augmented autophagy of toxic oligomers. Additionally, protein dephosphorylation, protein aggregation, and cell death are affected.
Figure 4The overlapping actions of metformin and rapamycin. Rapamycin acts by directly inhibiting mTOR and therefore translation regulation, which has a major influence of highly regulated processes such as mitochondrial biogenesis and autophagy. Metformin acts indirectly on the mTOR pathway through inhibition of complex I and activation of AMPK signaling. Metformin also reduces reactive oxygen species (ROS) via inhibitory action on complex I and NAD(P)H oxidase having an overall effect as a redox regulator. Downstream of metformin action, low level ROS can indirectly trigger signals for mitochondrial biogenesis and turnover of organelles and proteins via autophagy. Vice versa, maintenance of healthy mitochondrial networks involving autophagy and mitochondrial biogenesis further reduces build-up of damaging levels of ROS.