Atypical Protein Kinase C Hyperactivity in Insulin-Resistant and Insulin-Sensitive Forms of Alzheimer’s Disease: A Potential Therapeutic Target
- PMID: 33400466
- Bookshelf ID: NBK566121
- DOI: 10.36255/exonpublications.alzheimersdisease.2020.ch6
Atypical Protein Kinase C Hyperactivity in Insulin-Resistant and Insulin-Sensitive Forms of Alzheimer’s Disease: A Potential Therapeutic Target
Excerpt
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is commonly, not always, associated with insulin-resistant, hyperinsulinemic, and obesity/type-2-diabetic (O/T2D) states. Partial deficiencies of brain insulin receptor (IR) indeed occur in both O/T2D-AD and human AD, but these deficiencies can be bypassed by hyperinsulinemia, which activates atypical protein kinase C (aPKC) and β-secretase, increases Aβ-peptide and phospho-thr-231-tau levels, and induces memory impairments; importantly, these aberrations are reversed by reduction of liver/aPKC-dependent hyperinsulinemia or direct blockade of brain aPKC. New evidence shows that aPKC acts via nuclear factor kappa-B to increase β-secretase mRNA/protein levels in brain, where β-secretase acts on both β-amyloid precursor protein to increase AD risk and IR to limit beneficial (aPKC independent) insulin effects, particularly in normo/hypoinsulinemic AD, and liver, where β-secretase acts on IR to initiate or abet development of insulin resistance and compensatory hyperinsulinemia that originates from diet-induced hepatic aPKC activation. Fortunately, agents that inhibit PKC-λ/ι in brain, liver, or both effectively reduce β-secretase levels and adverse actions therein, and moreover, prevent/reverse O/T2D and AD development in mouse models. This chapter summarizes work implicating the critical role of atypical PKC in the development of liver-dependent hyperinsulinemia as a risk factor in O/T2D-associated AD and β-secretase-mediated pathological alterations in brains of O/T2D-associated and O/T2D-independent AD.
Copyright: The Authors.
Sections
- INTRODUCTION
- THE ESSENTIAL ROLE OF BACE1 IN THE PATHOGENESIS OF AD
- SYSTEMIC VERSUS BRAIN INSULIN RESISTANCE IN DIABETES-ASSOCIATED AND NONDIABETIC AD
- INSULIN RECEPTOR DOWNREGULATION IN OBESITY/T2DM AND AD
- HYPERINSULINEMIA IN INSULIN-RESISTANT FORMS OF OBESITY AND T2DM AS A RISK FACTOR FOR AD
- EFFECTS OF DAG-SENSITIVE PKCs (α,δ,ε) VERSUS aPKC-λ/ι ON BACE1 AND AD
- aPKC INHIBITORS
- aPKC REQUIREMENTS FOR MEMORY FUNCTION
- aPKC ACTIVATORS
- CONTROL OF BACE1 TRANSCRIPTION BY NFκB
- CONCLUSION
- REFERENCES
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