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. 2019;69(4):979-987.
doi: 10.3233/JAD-190241.

Serum Insulin-Like Growth Factor I Deficiency Associates to Alzheimer's Disease Co-Morbidities

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Serum Insulin-Like Growth Factor I Deficiency Associates to Alzheimer's Disease Co-Morbidities

Jonathan A Zegarra-Valdivia et al. J Alzheimers Dis. 2019.

Abstract

Increasing evidence supports the notion that Alzheimer's disease (AD), a condition that presents heterogeneous pathological disturbances, is also associated to perturbed metabolic function affecting insulin and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I). While impaired insulin activity leading to insulin resistance has been associated to AD, whether altered IGF-I function affects the disease is not entirely clear. Despite the limitations of mouse models to mimic AD pathology, we took advantage that serum IGF-I deficient mice (LID mice) present many functional perturbations present in AD, most prominently cognitive loss, which is reversed by treatment with systemic IGF-I. We analyzed whether these mice display other pathological traits that are usual co-morbidities of AD. We found that LID mice not only display cognitive disturbances, but also show altered mood and sociability, increased susceptibility to epileptiform activity, and a disturbed sleep/wake cycle. Collectively, these data suggest that reduced IGF-I activity contributes to heterogeneous deficits commonly associated to AD. We suggest that impaired IGF-I activity needs to be taken into consideration when modeling this condition.

Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; animal models of disease; co-morbidities; insulin-like growth factor 1.

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