Colivelin Ameliorates Impairments in Cognitive Behaviors and Synaptic Plasticity in APP/PS1 Transgenic Mice.
Wu. Meina M; Shi. Hui H; He. Yexin Y; Yuan. Li L; Qu. Xuesong X; Zhang. Jun J; Wang. Zhaojun Z; Cai. Hongyan H; Qi. Jinshun J
Key Findings
- Intranasal colivelin prevented memory deficits in APP/PS1 mice
- Colivelin reduced amyloid‑beta buildup in the hippocampus
- Colivelin restored normal long‑term potentiation, a brain plasticity measure
Practical Outcomes
- The results suggest colivelin could one day be explored as a nasal supplement for protecting memory and reducing Alzheimer‑related brain changes, but there’s no human data yet. Biohackers should wait for safety, dosing, and clinical trials before trying it themselves.
Summary
A study in Alzheimer‑model mice found that giving the peptide colivelin (a humanin‑based compound) through the nose helped the mice remember better, reduced brain amyloid plaques, and improved brain signaling linked to memory. These benefits were seen after chronic treatment, but the work was done only in mice, not people.
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common cause of dementia, and effective therapeutics are lacking. Colivelin (CLN), a novel, strong humanin derivative, is effective in vitro in preventing cell death induced by AD-causative genes and amyloid-β protein (Aβ) even at a low concentration. We recently demonstrated that intrahippocampal injection of CLN prevents Aβ25-35-induced deficits in spatial memory and synaptic plasticity in normal rats. Here, we further observed the effects of chronically intranasally (i.n.) administered CLN on cognitive behaviors and pathological hallmarks in 9-month-old APPswe/PS1dE9 (APP/PS1) AD mice using multiple behavioral tests and immunochemistry. The electrophysiological mechanism of CLN neuroprotection was also investigated by recording in vivo hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP). CLN pretreatment effectively prevented impairments in new object recognition, working memory, and long-term spatial memory and reversed the depression of in vivo hippocampal LTP in APP/PS1 mice. Additionally, chronic application of CLN obviously reduced Aβ deposition in the hippocampus in APP/PS1 mice. These results indicate that CLN has strong neuroprotective effects on learning and memory behaviors in APP/PS1 mice and that this behavioral improvement is closely associated with the reduction of Aβ deposition and alleviation of LTP suppression in the hippocampus, supporting the potential of CLN for the prevention and treatment of AD.
Study Information
pubmed
2017
10.3233/jad-170307