Awake intranasal insulin delivery modifies protein complexes and alters memory, anxiety, and olfactory behaviors

The role of insulin pathways in olfaction is of significant interest with the widespread pathology of diabetes mellitus and its associated metabolic and neuronal comorbidities. The insulin receptor (IR) kinase is expressed at high levels in the olfactory bulb, in which it suppresses a dominant Shaker ion channel (Kv1.3) via tyrosine phosphorylation of critical N- and C-terminal residues. We optimized a 7 d intranasal insulin delivery (IND) in awake mice to ascertain the biochemical and behavioral effects of insulin to this brain region, given that nasal sprays for insulin have been marketed notwithstanding our knowledge of the role of Kv1.3 in olfaction, metabolism, and axon targeting. IND evoked robust phosphorylation of Kv1.3, as well as increased channel protein-protein interactions with IR and postsynaptic density 95. IND-treated mice had an increased short- and long-term object memory recognition, increased anxiolytic behavior, and an increased odor discrimination using an odor habituation protocol but only moderate change in odor threshold using a two-choice paradigm. Unlike Kv1.3 gene-targeted deletion that alters metabolism, adiposity, and axonal targeting to defined olfactory glomeruli, suppression of Kvl.3 via IND had no effect on body weight nor the size and number of M72 glomeruli or the route of its sensory axon projections. There was no evidence of altered expression of sensory neurons in the epithelium. In mice made prediabetic via diet-induced obesity, IND was no longer effective in increasing long-term object memory recognition nor increasing anxiolytic behavior, suggesting state dependency or a degree of insulin resistance related to these behaviors.

Copyright 2009 Society for Neuroscience

Files

Metadata

Work Title Awake intranasal insulin delivery modifies protein complexes and alters memory, anxiety, and olfactory behaviors
Access
Open Access
Creators
  1. David R. Marks
  2. Kristal Tucker
  3. Melissa A. Cavallin
  4. Thomas G. Mast
  5. Debra A. Fadool
License In Copyright (Rights Reserved)
Work Type Article
Publisher
  1. Journal of Neuroscience
Publication Date May 20, 2009
Publisher Identifier (DOI)
  1. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1350-09.2009
Deposited June 18, 2025

Versions

Analytics

Collections

This resource is currently not in any collection.

Work History

Version 1
published

  • Created
  • Added Marks_et_al_2009-2.pdf
  • Added Creator David R. Marks
  • Added Creator Kristal Tucker
  • Added Creator Melissa A. Cavallin
  • Added Creator Thomas G. Mast
  • Added Creator Debra A. Fadool
  • Published
  • Updated