Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2131760568> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2131760568 endingPage "496" @default.
- W2131760568 startingPage "482" @default.
- W2131760568 abstract "Characterized as a peripheral metabolic disorder and a degenerative disease of the central nervous system respectively, it is now widely recognized that type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and Alzheimer's disease (AD) share several common abnormalities including impaired glucose metabolism, increased oxidative stress, insulin resistance and amyloidogenesis. Several recent studies suggest that this is not an epiphenomenon, but rather these two diseases disrupt common molecular pathways and each disease compounds the progression of the other. For instance, in AD the accumulation of the amyloid-beta peptide (Aβ), which characterizes the disease and is thought to participate in the neurodegenerative process, may also induce neuronal insulin resistance. Conversely, disrupting normal glucose metabolism in transgenic animal models of AD that over-express the human amyloid precursor protein (hAPP) promotes amyloid-peptide aggregation and accelerates the disease progression. Studying these processes at a cellular level suggests that insulin resistance and Aβ aggregation may not only be the consequence of excitotoxicity, aberrant Ca2+ signals, and proinflammatory cytokines such as TNF-α, but may also promote these pathological effectors. At the molecular level, insulin resistance and Aβ disrupt common signal transduction cascades including the insulin receptor family/PI3 kinase/Akt/GSK3 pathway. Thus both disease processes contribute to overlapping pathology, thereby compounding disease symptoms and progression." @default.
- W2131760568 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2131760568 creator A5017348121 @default.
- W2131760568 creator A5091770078 @default.
- W2131760568 date "2009-05-01" @default.
- W2131760568 modified "2023-10-11" @default.
- W2131760568 title "Insulin resistance and amyloidogenesis as common molecular foundation for type 2 diabetes and Alzheimer's disease" @default.
- W2131760568 cites W111949188 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W133763066 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W142505139 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1496740734 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1507515137 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1514745038 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1527910050 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1538276446 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1543788907 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1543878663 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1544564931 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1557933310 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1559185749 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1561443084 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1563190123 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1567624342 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1590376803 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1594199569 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1602023824 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1627446849 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1637989849 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W167100554 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1711248712 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1953255974 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1964964168 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1965600418 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1965926538 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1966017723 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1967550038 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1967564647 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1967789041 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1968953073 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1969967075 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1970706062 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1970874743 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1972256149 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1972567838 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1972850054 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1974588388 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1974800870 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1975677029 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1976919988 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1977570151 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1978002465 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1979008330 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1980750700 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1982825238 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1983789627 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1984303089 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1984924722 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1986144956 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1986245376 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1986245436 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1987133531 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1987522063 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1988772292 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1989790828 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1990749733 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1990861932 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1991084221 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1992380863 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1992431456 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1993437043 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1993465897 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1993775827 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1995357799 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1995491925 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1995680954 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1995787968 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1997260013 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1998493448 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1998543682 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1998933601 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W1999643558 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W2000051509 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W2000283248 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W2000351678 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W2000706612 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W2000896479 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W2001210466 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W2002070144 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W2002680583 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W2003320905 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W2003813921 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W2004546493 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W2004852048 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W2005481412 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W2005566523 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W2005681172 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W2006819627 @default.
- W2131760568 cites W2006851823 @default.