GLPwatch

An anti-diabetes agent protects the mouse brain from defective insulin signaling caused by Alzheimer's disease- associated Aβ oligomers.

J Clin Invest · 2012

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers found that brain insulin signaling problems seen in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) resemble those in diabetes, with a protein called IRS-1 becoming abnormally activated. In lab tests, a diabetes drug called exendin-4 (exenatide) prevented damage to brain cells caused by amyloid-beta oligomers, which are linked to AD. In mice modeling AD, the drug reduced these abnormalities and improved memory-related behaviors.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Clin Invest, 2012
Citations712
Relative citation ratio22.54
NIH percentile99
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Alzheimers

Abstract

Defective brain insulin signaling has been suggested to contribute to the cognitive deficits in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). Although a connection between AD and diabetes has been suggested, a major unknown is the mechanism(s) by which insulin resistance in the brain arises in individuals with AD. Here, we show that serine phosphorylation of IRS-1 (IRS-1pSer) is common to both diseases. Brain tissue from humans with AD had elevated levels of IRS-1pSer and activated JNK, analogous to what occurs in peripheral tissue in patients with diabetes. We found that amyloid-β peptide (Aβ) oligomers, synaptotoxins that accumulate in the brains of AD patients, activated the JNK/TNF-α pathway, induced IRS-1 phosphorylation at multiple serine residues, and inhibited physiological IRS-1pTyr in mature cultured hippocampal neurons. Impaired IRS-1 signaling was also present in the hippocampi of Tg mice with a brain condition that models AD. Importantly, intracerebroventricular injection of Aβ oligomers triggered hippocampal IRS-1pSer and JNK activation in cynomolgus monkeys. The oligomer-induced neuronal pathologies observed in vitro, including impaired axonal transport, were prevented by exposure to exendin-4 (exenatide), an anti-diabetes agent. In Tg mice, exendin-4 decreased levels of hippocampal IRS-1pSer and activated JNK and improved behavioral measures of cognition. By establishing molecular links between the dysregulated insulin signaling in AD and diabetes, our results open avenues for the investigation of new therapeutics in AD.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 22476196 ↗