We think of insulin as something made by the pancreas to control blood sugar. But what if your brain made its own? New research in human brain tissue reveals a surprising local connection. Scientists looked at specific types of calming brain cells, called interneurons, in the outer layer of the brain's cortex. They found that two particular subtypes—called neurogliaform and rosehip cells—were special. These cells not only carried the receptor for a common diabetes drug (GLP-1, like in Ozempic), but they also actively produced insulin messenger molecules right there in the brain. In the cells studied, the receptor was found in 44 out of 72 neurogliaform cells and 18 out of 36 rosehip cells. Insulin production was found in 29 and 11 of those same cell groups, respectively. Other similar calming cells showed no insulin production at all. The analysis showed these two molecules—the drug receptor and insulin—were often made together in the same cells, suggesting a coordinated local system. This discovery points to a potential 'intracortical metabolic signaling' network, meaning the brain's outer layer might have its own way of managing energy and signals using these molecules, completely separate from the body's main insulin supply. It's a clue that could help us understand why drugs that target blood sugar sometimes have powerful effects on the brain.
Could your brain cells make their own insulin? New research finds surprising link in human brain tissue.
Photo by Rick Rothenberg / Unsplash
What this means for you:
Specific human brain cells can locally produce insulin and carry a diabetes drug receptor, hinting at a brain-based energy system.