Dysregulated insulin signaling and
inflammation contribute to the
pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease:
From animal models to human cells
Marcus Elo Rytter, Cecilie Amalie Brøgger Svane, Joachim Størling*
, Wenqiang Chen*
Steno Diabetes Center Copenhagen, Herlev,
Denmark (Rytter ME, Svane CAB, Størling J,
Chen W)
Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of
Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark (Størling J)
Joslin Diabetes Center, Harvard Medical School,
Boston, MA, USA (Chen W)
Online:2026-03-15
Published:2025-07-04
Contact:
Joachim Størling, PhD, joachim.stoerling@regionh.dk;
Wenqiang Chen, PhD, wenqiang.chen@joslin.harvard.edu.
Supported by:
This work was supported by grants from NIH T32
(DK007260, to WC), and the Steno North American
Fellowship awarded by the Novo Nordisk Foundation
(NNF23OC0087108, to WC).
Marcus Elo Rytter, Cecilie Amalie Brøgger Svane, Joachim Størling , Wenqiang Chen. Dysregulated insulin signaling and
inflammation contribute to the
pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease:
From animal models to human cells[J]. Neural Regeneration Research, 2026, 21(3): 1126-1127.