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Diabetes Drug Makes Brain Cells Grow

nootropics

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#1 Gnumf

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Posted 06 July 2012 - 12:11 PM


Diabetes Drug Makes Brain Cells Grow


ScienceDaily (July 5, 2012) — The widely used diabetes drug metformin comes with a rather unexpected and alluring side effect: it encourages the growth of new neurons in the brain. The study reported in the July 6th issue of Cell Stem Cell, a Cell Press publication, also finds that those neural effects of the drug also make mice smarter.

Earlier work by Miller's team highlighted a pathway known as aPKC-CBP for its essential role in telling neural stem cells where and when to differentiate into mature neurons. As it happened, others had found before them that the same pathway is important for the metabolic effects of the drug metformin, but in liver cells.The discovery is an important step toward therapies that aim to repair the brain not by introducing new stem cells but rather by spurring those that are already present into action, says the study's lead author Freda Miller of the University of Toronto-affiliated Hospital for Sick Children. The fact that it's a drug that is so widely used and so safe makes the news all that much better.

"We put two and two together," Miller says. If metformin activates the CBP pathway in the liver, they thought, maybe it could also do that in neural stem cells of the brain to encourage brain repair.

The new evidence lends support to that promising idea in both mouse brains and human cells. Mice taking metformin not only showed an increase in the birth of new neurons, but they were also better able to learn the location of a hidden platform in a standard maze test of spatial learning.

While it remains to be seen whether the very popular diabetes drug might already be serving as a brain booster for those who are now taking it, there are already some early hints that it may have cognitive benefits for people with Alzheimer's disease. It had been thought those improvements were the result of better diabetes control, Miller says, but it now appears that metformin may improve Alzheimer's symptoms by enhancing brain repair.

Miller says they now hope to test whether metformin might help repair the brains of those who have suffered brain injury due to trauma or radiation therapies for cancer.


Do you have any experience or comments on the subject?


http://www.scienceda...20705172044.htm

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#2 Raphy

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Posted 06 July 2012 - 01:17 PM

These diabetes drugs seems a good deal against aging.

I think a stack of C60/oo + rapamicyn + metformin can be a winner.

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#3 Michael

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Posted 19 July 2012 - 11:42 AM

This is rather odd, because just a few months previously, the NIA's Rafal de Cabo reported that "metformin treatment [of wild-type mice] had no significant effect on spatial memory or learning ... [and] led to decline in mRNA levels of several neurotrophic factors including brain-derived neurotrophic factor, nerve growth factor and neurotrophin factor-3. Additionally, metformin treatment increased mRNA levels of key inflammatory factors including tumor necrosis factor alpha, Interleukin -6 and Interleukin-10. In [the Alzheimer’s-model mice], metformin treatment showed no effect on beta-amyloid plaque deposition or on the number of doublecortin labeled, newly developing neurons in the hippocampus."

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#4 1thoughtMaze1

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Posted 19 July 2012 - 12:12 PM

If you dont have diabetes and take diabetes drugs you are prone to develope it.
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