Impaired Expression of Humanin during Adrenocortical Carcinoma.
Blatkiewicz. Małgorzata M; Szyszka. Marta M; Olechnowicz. Anna A; Kamiński. Kacper K; Jopek. Karol K; Komarowska. Hanna H; Tyczewska. Marianna M; Klimont. Anna A; Wierzbicki. Tomasz T; Karczewski. Marek M; Ruchała. Marek M; Rucinski. Marcin M
Key Findings
- Humanin mRNA is significantly reduced in adrenal cancer tissue compared to healthy controls
- Serum humanin levels are not different between patients and healthy people
- Patient age positively correlates with serum humanin, while tumor size negatively correlates with LDL levels
Practical Outcomes
- At this stage there’s no direct action for biohackers—humanin isn’t shown to improve health or prevent cancer here. The findings mainly highlight a possible link between mitochondrial health and adrenal cancer, suggesting more research before any supplementation or protocol changes.
Summary
Researchers found that people with a rare adrenal cancer have lower levels of the humanin gene in their tumor tissue, but their blood levels of the peptide stay the same. Older patients tend to have higher blood humanin, and bigger tumors are linked to lower LDL cholesterol. The drop in humanin may be due to messed‑up mitochondria, but the study doesn’t tell us how to use this info in everyday health hacks.
Abstract
The discovery of mitochondria-derived peptides (MDPs) has provided a new perspective on mitochondrial function. MDPs encoded by mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) can act as hormone-like peptides, influencing cell survival and proliferation. Among these peptides, humanin has been identified as a crucial factor for maintaining cell survival and preventing cell death under various conditions. Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare and aggressive malignancy that results from adrenal hormone dysfunction. This study aimed to investigate humanin expression in the adrenal tissue and serum of patients with ACC. For the first time, our study revealed significant reduction in the mRNA expression of humanin in patients with ACC compared to healthy controls. However, no significant changes were observed in the serum humanin levels. Interestingly, we identified a positive correlation between patient age and serum humanin levels and a negative correlation between tumor size and LDL levels. While the impaired expression of humanin in patients with ACC may be attributed to mitochondrial dysfunction, an alternative explanation could be related to diminished mitochondrial copy number. Further investigations are warranted to elucidate the intricate relationship among humanin, mitochondrial function, and ACC pathology.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-01-15T00:00:00.000Z
10.3390/ijms25021038
1
67