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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 3
2023 pubmed 41 citations

Inflammation, oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction in the progression of type II diabetes mellitus with coexisting hypertension.

Yousef. Hibba H; Khandoker. Ahsan H AH; Feng. Samuel F SF; Helf. Charlotte C; Jelinek. Herbert F HF

Key Findings

  • Humanin levels are lower in prediabetes‑to‑T2DM transition, indicating mitochondrial stress
  • Humanin levels are higher in T2DM patients who also have hypertension and are on antihypertensive meds, suggesting medication may improve mitochondrial function
  • Inflammatory and oxidative stress markers rise in T2DM but decrease in T2DM+HT, likely due to medication effects

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, humanin could serve as a biomarker to gauge mitochondrial health during metabolic disease progression. Interventions that naturally raise humanin (e.g., exercise, certain nutraceuticals) might be worth exploring, but direct supplementation lacks clinical evidence yet.

Summary

The study measured humanin, a tiny protein linked to mitochondrial health, in people ranging from healthy to having type‑2 diabetes (T2DM) and those with both T2DM and high blood pressure. Humanin levels dropped when people moved from pre‑diabetes to full diabetes, suggesting worse mitochondrial function, but rose again in the group that also took blood‑pressure meds, hinting that those drugs might improve mitochondrial health. While the research doesn’t test humanin supplements, it shows humanin could be a useful marker for tracking disease and possibly for guiding interventions aimed at boosting mitochondrial function.

Abstract

Type II diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is a metabolic disorder that poses a serious health concern worldwide due to its rising prevalence. Hypertension (HT) is a frequent comorbidity of T2DM, with the co-occurrence of both conditions increasing the risk of diabetes-associated complications. Inflammation and oxidative stress (OS) have been identified as leading factors in the development and progression of both T2DM and HT. However, OS and inflammation processes associated with these two comorbidities are not fully understood. This study aimed to explore changes in the levels of plasma and urinary inflammatory and OS biomarkers, along with mitochondrial OS biomarkers connected to mitochondrial dysfunction (MitD). These markers may provide a more comprehensive perspective associated with disease progression from no diabetes, and prediabetes, to T2DM coexisting with HT in a cohort of patients attending a diabetes health clinic in Australia. Three-hundred and eighty-four participants were divided into four groups according to disease status: 210 healthy controls, 55 prediabetic patients, 32 T2DM, and 87 patients with T2DM and HT (T2DM+HT). Kruskal-Wallis and &#x3c7;2 tests were conducted between the four groups to detect significant differences for numerical and categorical variables, respectively. For the transition from prediabetes to T2DM, interleukin-10 (IL-10), C-reactive protein (CRP), 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG), humanin (HN), and p66<sup>Shc</sup> were the most discriminatory biomarkers, generally displaying elevated levels of inflammation and OS in T2DM, in addition to disrupted mitochondrial function as revealed by p66<sup>Shc</sup> and HN. Disease progression from T2DM to T2DM+HT indicated lower levels of inflammation and OS as revealed through IL-10, interleukin-6 (IL-6), interleukin-1&#x3b2; (IL-1&#x3b2;), 8-OHdG and oxidized glutathione (GSSG) levels, most likely due to antihypertensive medication use in the T2DM +HT patient group. The results also indicated better mitochondrial function in this group as shown through higher HN and lower p66<sup>Shc</sup> levels, which can also be attributed to medication use. However, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) levels appeared to be independent of medication, providing an effective biomarker even in the presence of medication use. The results of this study suggest that a more comprehensive review of inflammation and OS biomarkers is more effective in discriminating between the stages of T2DM progression in the presence or absence of HT. Our results further indicate the usefulness of medication use, especially with respect to the known involvement of inflammation and OS in disease progression, highlighting specific biomarkers during disease progression and therefore allowing a more targeted individualized treatment plan.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2023

Date

2023-06-13T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3389/fendo.2023.1173402

Citations

41

References

93