Mitochondrial Peptide Humanin Facilitates Chemoresistance in Glioblastoma Cells.
Peña Agudelo. Jorge A JA; Pidre. Matías L ML; Garcia Fallit. Matias M; Pérez Küper. Melanie M; Zuccato. Camila C; Nicola Candia. Alejandro J AJ; Marchesini. Abril A; Vera. Mariana B MB; De Simone. Emilio E; Giampaoli. Carla C; Amorós Morales. Leslie C LC; Gonzalez. Nazareno N; Romanowski. Víctor V; Videla-Richardson. Guillermo A GA; Seilicovich. Adriana A; Candolfi. Marianela M
Key Findings
- Chemotherapy raises humanin levels in glioblastoma cells
- A humanin analog (HNGF6A) makes these cancer cells more resistant to chemo and more mobile
- Blocking the humanin receptor FPR2 stops these protective effects
- Silencing humanin reduces chemoresistance and migration of glioblastoma cells
Practical Outcomes
- If you’re using humanin supplements for anti‑aging or neuro‑protection, be aware it could potentially support tumor growth in the brain. People with a history of glioblastoma or other cancers should be cautious and consider avoiding high‑dose humanin until more safety data are available.
Summary
The study found that the mitochondrial peptide humanin can actually help brain cancer cells (glioblastoma) survive chemotherapy and become more aggressive, meaning taking humanin might not be safe for people with cancer or at high risk of it.
Abstract
Humanin (HN) is a mitochondrial-derived peptide with robust cytoprotective effects in many cell types. Although the administration of HN analogs has been proposed to treat degenerative diseases, its role in the pathogenesis of cancer is poorly understood. Here, we evaluated whether HN affects the chemosensitivity of glioblastoma (GBM) cells. We found that chemotherapy upregulated HN expression in GBM cell lines and primary cultures derived from GBM biopsies. An HN analog (HNGF6A) boosted chemoresistance, increased the migration of GBM cells and improved their capacity to induce endothelial cell migration and proliferation. Chemotherapy also upregulated FPR2 expression, an HN membrane-bound receptor, and the HNGF6A cytoprotective effects were inhibited by an FPR2 receptor antagonist (WRW4). These effects were observed in glioma cells with heterogeneous genetic backgrounds, i.e., glioma cells with wild-type (wtIDH) and mutated (mIDH) isocitrate dehydrogenase. HN silencing using a baculoviral vector that encodes for a specific shRNA for HN (BV.shHN) reduced chemoresistance, and impaired the migration and proangiogenic capacity of GBM cells. Taken together, our findings suggest that HN boosts the hallmark characteristics of GBM, i.e., chemoresistance, migration and endothelial cell proliferation. Thus, strategies that inhibit the HN/FPR2 pathway may improve the response of GBM to standard therapy.
Study Information
pubmed
2023
2023-08-11T00:00:00.000Z
10.3390/cancers15164061
11
55