Abstract

Alzheimer’s disease is the most common form of dementia, and epidemiological studies support that type 2 diabetes (T2D) is a major contributor. The relationship between both diseases and the fact that Alzheimer’s disease (AD) does not have a successful treatment support the study on antidiabetic drugs limiting or slowing down brain complications in AD. Among these, liraglutide (LRGT), a glucagon-like peptide-1 agonist, is currently being tested in patients with AD in the Evaluating Liraglutide in Alzheimer’s Disease (ELAD) clinical trial. However, the effects of LRGT on brain pathology when AD and T2D coexist have not been assessed. We have administered LRGT (500 μg/kg/day) to a mixed murine model of AD and T2D (APP/PS1xdb/db mice) for 20 weeks. We have evaluated metabolic parameters as well as the effects of LRGT on learning and memory. Postmortem analysis included assessment of brain amyloid-β and tau pathologies, microglia activation, spontaneous bleeding and neuronal loss, as well as insulin and insulin-like growth factor 1 receptors. LRGT treatment reduced glucose levels in diabetic mice (db/db and APP/PS1xdb/db) after 4 weeks of treatment. LRGT also helped to maintain insulin levels after 8 weeks of treatment. While we did not detect any effects on cortical insulin or insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor m-RNA levels, LRGT significantly reduced brain atrophy in the db/db and APP/PS1xdb/db mice. LRGT treatment also rescued neuron density in the APP/PS1xdb/db mice in the proximity (p = 0.008) far from amyloid plaques (p < 0.001). LRGT reduced amyloid plaque burden in the APP/PS1 animals (p < 0.001), as well as Aβ aggregates levels (p = 0.046), and tau hyperphosphorylation (p = 0.009) in the APP/PS1xdb/db mice. Spontaneous bleeding was also ameliorated in the APP/PS1xdb/db animals (p = 0.012), and microglia burden was reduced in the proximity of amyloid plaques in the APP/PS1 and APP/PS1xdb/db mice (p < 0.001), while microglia was reduced in areas far from amyloid plaques in the db/db and APP/PS1xdb/db mice (p < 0.001). This overall improvement helped to rescue cognitive impairment in AD-T2D mice in the new object discrimination test (p < 0.001) and Morris water maze (p < 0.001). Altogether, our data support the role of LRGT in reduction of associated brain complications when T2D and AD occur simultaneously, as regularly observed in the clinical arena.

Highlights

  • Age remains the main risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease (AD)

  • LRGT reduced non-fasting glucose levels in the APP/PS1xdb/db mice when compared with the untreated APP/SP1xdb/db animals by 10 weeks of age, and a similar profile was observed by 14 weeks of age

  • We observed that neuronal density in the cortex was significantly reduced in the proximity of amyloid plaques when the APP/PS1xdb/db mice were compared with the APP/PS1 and APP/PS1-LRGT treated animals, while the LRGT-treated APP/PS1xdb/db mice presented values similar to those detected in the APP/PS1 and APP/PS1-LRGT mice (Figures 3C,D)

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Summary

Introduction

Age remains the main risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease (AD). metabolic disorders, and type 2 diabetes (T2D) may increase the risk of AD by over twofolds (Sims-Robinson et al, 2010; Ryu et al, 2019). While it is widely accepted that cognitive dysfunction is an important and common comorbidity of diabetes, this effect does not seem to be directly related to alterations in amyloid pathology, and previous studies have reported no differences in cerebrospinal fluid amyloid-β (Aβ)-42 levels, global or regional AD pathology, or amyloid burden (Arvanitakis et al, 2006; Moran et al, 2015; Pruzin et al, 2017; Biessels and Despa, 2018). It has been suggested that the inconsistent findings relating T2D to AD pathology might be due to the inclusion of heterogeneous diabetic populations and not accounting for glycemic control. In this sense, individuals with undiagnosed diabetes have increased risk of dementia when compared with individuals with well-managed diabetes and without diabetes (McIntosh et al, 2019). Patients with AD have an increased risk of T2D, and up to 81% of patients with AD have T2D or impaired fasting glucose (Janson et al, 2004), supporting a two-way cross-talk between both pathologies

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