| Literature DB >> 30564544 |
A M Fernandez1, A Santi1, I Torres Aleman1.
Abstract
The search for the cause of Alzheimer's disease (AD), that affects millions of people worldwide, is currently one of the most important scientific endeavors from a clinical perspective. There are so many mechanisms proposed, and so disparate changes observed, that it is becoming a challenging task to provide a comprehensive view of possible pathogenic processes in AD. Tauopathy (intracellular neurofibrillary tangles) and amyloidosis (extracellular amyloid plaques) are the anatomical hallmarks of the disease, and the formation of these proteinaceous aggregates in specific brain areas is widely held as the ultimate pathogenic mechanism. However, the triggers of this dysproteostasis process remain unknown. Further, neurofibrillary tangles and plaques may only constitute the last stages of a process of still uncertain origin. Thus, without an established knowledge of its etiology, and no cure in the horizon, prevention - or merely delaying its development, has become a last-resort goal in AD research. As with other success stories in preventive medicine, epidemiological studies have provided basic knowledge of risk factors in AD that may contribute to understand its etiology. Disregarding old age, gender, and ApoE4 genotype as non preventable risk factors, there are diverse life-style traits - many of them closely related to cardiovascular health, that have been associated to AD risk. Most prominent among them are diet, physical and mental activity, exposure to stress, and sleep/wake patterns. We argue that all these life-style factors engage insulinergic pathways that affect brain function, providing a potentially unifying thread for life-style and AD risk. Although further studies are needed to firmly establish a link between faulty insulinergic function and AD, we herein summarize the evidence that this link should be thoroughly considered.Entities:
Keywords: Insulin peptides; diet; life-style; physical and mental activity; risk of Alzheimer disease; sleep/wake cycle; stress
Year: 2018 PMID: 30564544 PMCID: PMC6297900 DOI: 10.3233/BPL-180071
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Plast ISSN: 2213-6304
Fig. 1Altered ILP function mediates the impact of life-style factors on pathological changes associated to Alzheimer’s disease. Diet, mental and physical activity, sleep quality and mood can modulate ILP function that in turn intervene in many processes known to be altered in AD. Main ones include homeosteatic inflammation, protection against reactive oxygen species, tissue remodelling (including formation of new vessels, neurons and glia), glucose handling by brain cells, synaptic plasticity – that in turn impacts on mood, cognition, and sleep architecture, Aβ clearance, tau phosphorylation, proteostasis (autophagy, proteosome activity) and mitochondrial function. *New neuronal formation is an important aspect of ILPs function in the adult brain. However, recent controversial evidence in favor [192] or against [193] the presence of neurogenesis in the adult human brain puts somewhat in hold the significance of this ILP trait in human physiology.
Fig. 2Stress reduces IGF-I signaling in brain. C57BL/6 mice were exposed to a predator (a rat) or a sham predator (a toy rat) for 10 minutes. An environmental enrichment (EE) protocol was used 24 hours later in half of the animals to increase the entrance of IGF-I into the brain [69], while the rest stayed at their home cages (Stand: standard housing). After 2 hours of EE, animals where sacrificed and their hippocampi collected to determine levels of phosphorylated IGF-I receptor. Both the enrichment and the immunoprecipitation + western blot protocols were performed as described [194].
Main lifestyle factors associated to risk of Alzheimer’s disease
| Life-style factor | Relevant mechanisms | References |
|---|---|---|
| Diet | Diet components such as lipids interfere with brain entrance of insulin/IGF-I. | [ |
| Inflammation and oxidative stress produced by unhealthy diets. | [ | |
| Physical Activity | Exercise increases brain sensitivity to insulin and stimulates brain uptake of circulating IGF-I. | [ |
| Stress | High glucocorticoids elicit insulin/IGF-I resistance. | [ |
| Stress reduces brain IGF-I signalling. |
| |
| Mental Activity | Increased mental activity will increase brain uptake of IGF-I. | [ |
| Sleep/Wake Cycle | Insulin modulation of orexin neurons may impact on activity patterns. | [ |