Neurobiology of disease
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Neurobiology of disease · Nov 2010
Rosiglitazone reduces tau phosphorylation via JNK inhibition in the hippocampus of rats with type 2 diabetes and tau transfected SH-SY5Y cells.
Increasing evidence supports an association between Alzheimer's disease (AD) and diabetes. Rosiglitazone, a peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ (PPARγ) agonist, which is an anti-diabetic agent against type 2 diabetes, is currently in Phase III clinical trials in AD patients because rosiglitazone reduces β-amyloid (Aβ) pathology and inflammation. However, few studies have investigated whether rosiglitazone affects tau phosphorylation, another critical pathological feature of AD. ⋯ The activity of JNK was reduced in the hippocampus of rosiglitazone-treated OLETF rats, correlating with a reduction in tau phosphorylation, however, which was not correlated with GSK3β activity. In human tau-transfected SH-SY5Y neuronal cell line, reduction of tau phosphorylation was also associated with reduction of JNK activity, not of GSK3β activity. Hence, rosiglitazone could be used in reducing tau phosphorylation through JNK inactivation for therapeutic effects in type 2 diabetes related Alzheimer's disease.