Metformin therapy in a transgenic mouse model of Huntington's disease

TC Ma, JL Buescher, B Oatis, JA Funk, AJ Nash… - Neuroscience …, 2007 - Elsevier
TC Ma, JL Buescher, B Oatis, JA Funk, AJ Nash, RL Carrier, KR Hoyt
Neuroscience letters, 2007Elsevier
Huntington's disease (HD) is a hereditary neurodegenerative disease that leads to striatal
degeneration and a severe movement disorder. We used a transgenic mouse model of HD
(the R6/2 line with∼ 150 glutamine repeats) to test a new therapy for this disease. We
treated HD mice with metformin, a widely used anti-diabetes drug, in the drinking water (0, 2
or 5mg/ml) starting at 5 weeks of age. Metformin treatment significantly prolonged the
survival time of male HD mice at the 2mg/ml dose (20.1% increase in lifespan) without …
Huntington's disease (HD) is a hereditary neurodegenerative disease that leads to striatal degeneration and a severe movement disorder. We used a transgenic mouse model of HD (the R6/2 line with ∼150 glutamine repeats) to test a new therapy for this disease. We treated HD mice with metformin, a widely used anti-diabetes drug, in the drinking water (0, 2 or 5mg/ml) starting at 5 weeks of age. Metformin treatment significantly prolonged the survival time of male HD mice at the 2mg/ml dose (20.1% increase in lifespan) without affecting fasting blood glucose levels. This dose of metformin also decreased hind limb clasping time in 11-week-old mice. The higher dose did not prolong survival, and neither dose of metformin was effective in female HD mice. Collectively, our results suggest that metformin may be worth further investigation in additional HD models.
Elsevier