| 7-Mar-2005 - Researchers discover
link between insulin and Alzheimer's
Discovery that insulin is produced in the brain raises
possibility of Type 3 diabetes
Providence, RI – Researchers at Rhode Island Hospital and Brown
Medical School have discovered that insulin and its related proteins are
produced in the brain, and that reduced levels of both are linked to Alzheimer's
disease. The findings are reported in the March issue of the Journal of
Alzheimer's Disease (http://www.j-alz.com), published by IOS Press.
"What we found is that insulin is not just produced
in the pancreas, but also in the brain. And we discovered that insulin
and its growth factors, which are necessary for the survival of brain
cells, contribute to the progression of Alzheimer's," says senior
author Suzanne M. de la Monte, a neuropathologist at Rhode Island Hospital
and a professor of pathology at Brown Medical School. "This raises
the possibility of a Type 3 diabetes."
It has previously been known that insulin resistance,
a characteristic of diabetes, is tied to neurodegeneration. While scientists
have suspected a link between diabetes and Alzheimer's disease, this is
the first study to provide evidence of that connection.
By studying a gene abnormality in rats that blocks insulin
signaling in the brain, researchers found that insulin and IGF I and II
are all expressed in neurons in several regions in the brain.
Additionally, researchers determined that a drop in insulin
production in the brain contributes to the degeneration of brain cells,
an early symptom of Alzheimer's. "These abnormalities do not correspond
to Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes, but reflect a different and more complex
disease process that originates in the CNS (central nervous system),"
the paper states.
By looking at postmortem brain tissue from people diagnosed
with Alzheimer's disease, researchers discovered that growth factors are
not produced at normal levels in the hippocampus – the part of the
brain responsible for memory. The absence of these growth factors, in
turn, causes cells in other parts of the brain to die. Reserachers found
that insulin and IGF I were significantly reduced in the frontal cortex,
hippocampus and hypothalamus – all areas that are affected by the
progression of Alzheimer's. Conversely, in the cerebellum, which is generally
not affected by Alzheimer's, scientists did not see the same drop in insulin
and IGF I.
"Now that scientists have pinpointed insulin and
its growth factors as contributors to Alzheimer's, this opens the way
for targeted treatment to the brain and changes the way we view Alzheimer's
disease," de la Monte says.
In an accompanying review article, de la Monte and accompanying
author Jack Wands, MD, of Rhode Island Hospital and Brown Medical School,
write that "there is a genuine need for thorough and comprehensive
study of the neuropathological changes associated with diabetes mellitus,
in the presence or absence of superimposed Alzheimer's Disease or vascular
dementia."
Full Release - http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2005-03/l-rdl030205.php
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