Abstract

There is an urgent need for new ways to treat Alzheimer’s disease (AD), the most common cause of dementia in the elderly. Current therapies are modestly effective at treating the symptoms, and do not significantly alter the course of the disease. Over the years, a range of epidemiological and experimental studies have demonstrated interactions between diabetes mellitus and AD. As both diseases are leading causes of morbidity and mortality in the elderly and are frequent co-morbid conditions, it has raised the possibility that treating diabetes might be effective in slowing AD. This is currently being attempted with drugs such as the insulin sensitizer rosiglitazone. These two diseases share many clinical and biochemical features, such as elevated oxidative stress, vascular dysfunction, amyloidogenesis and impaired glucose metabolism suggesting common pathogenic mechanisms. The main thrust of this review will be to explore the evidence from a pathological point of view to determine whether diabetes can cause or exacerbate AD. This was supported by a number of animal models of AD that have been shown to have enhanced pathology when diabetic conditions were induced. The one drawback in linking diabetes and insulin to AD has been the postmortem studies of diabetic brains demonstrating that AD pathology was not increased; in fact decreased pathology has often been reported. In addition, diabetes induces its own distinct features of neuropathology different from AD. There are common pathological features to be considered including vascular abnormalities, a major feature arising from diabetes; there is increasing evidence that vascular abnormalities can contribute to AD. The most important common mechanism between insulin-resistant (type II) diabetes and AD could be impaired insulin signaling; a form of toxic amyloid can damage neuronal insulin receptors and affect insulin signaling and cell survival. It has even been suggested that AD could be considered as “type 3 diabetes” since insulin can be produced in brain. Another common feature of diabetes and AD are increased advanced glycation endproduct-modified proteins are found in diabetes and in the AD brain; the receptor for advanced glycation endproducts plays a prominent role in both diseases. In addition, a major role for insulin degrading enzyme in the degradation of Aβ peptide has been identified. Although clinical trials of certain types of diabetic medications for treatment of AD have been conducted, further understanding the common pathological processes of diabetes and AD are needed to determine whether these diseases share common therapeutic targets.

Highlights

  • Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common cause of dementia in the elderly resulting in significant morbidity and health care costs

  • Recent studies have shown that interactions of the specific soluble toxic forms of A known as Abeta derived diffusible ligands (ADDL), with neuronal insulin receptors have suggested as a neurotoxic mechanism in AD

  • In a study to test the hypothesis that insulin signaling provides a protective mechanism against ADDLs toxicity, it was shown that the neurotoxic effects of ADDLs could be competitively inhibited with insulin, or with suboptimal doses of insulin combined with the insulin receptor sensitizing drug rosiglitozone, by blocking ADDLs binding to synapses [122]

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common cause of dementia in the elderly resulting in significant morbidity and health care costs. Glucose metabolism has a pivotal role in maintaining all aspects of the health of the brain; glucose dysregulation has a multitude of pathological effects with many of these being observed in patients with diabetes. It has been known for many years that reduced glucose metabolism, as demonstrated by positron emission tomography using Fluorodeoxyglucose as ligand, is an early indication of the development of AD [4,5,6]. Insulin is the major hormone that regulates glucose metabolism in the periphery and the brain, so it can be expected that diseases with glucose dysregulation, namely Type I and Type II diabetes, will have consequences on brain function. Some of the features of how failure of insulin signaling leads to AD pathology has been better elucidated in animal models rather than in humans

Glucose Metabolism as a Biomarker for AD
Diabetes and AD
AD and Type-2 Diabetes
FEATURES OF AD AND INSULIN DEFICIENCY
Insulin and Insulin Growth Factor in the Brain
Insulin Production in the Central Nervous System
Diabetes and AD – Pathology Studies
Hypertension is a Common Feature of T2D
BIOCHEMICAL MECHANISMS LINKING INSULIN AND AD
Insulin Signaling and A
Insulin Degrading Enzyme in Diabetes and AD
Animal Models for CNS Insulin Signaling Deficits in AD
Transgenic Mice and Insulin Degrading Enzyme
Transgenic Mice and Insulin Signaling
NEUROPHARMACOLOGY OF INSULIN THERAPY
Current Treatment Plans for DM and AD
Effects of Intranasal Administration of Insulin on Cognition and AD
Findings
CONCLUSION
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.