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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 3
2024 pubmed 2 citations

Mitochondrial-derived peptides, HNG and SHLP3, protect cochlear hair cells against gentamicin.

Lu. Yu Y; Bartoszek. Ewelina M EM; Cortada. Maurizio M; Bodmer. Daniel D; Levano Huaman. Soledad S

Key Findings

  • HNG and SHLP3 reduced gentamicin‑induced loss of cochlear hair cells in organ‑of‑Corti explants
  • The protective effect involved activation of AKT and AMPK signaling pathways
  • Both peptides lowered oxidative stress markers and inflammatory gene expression

Practical Outcomes

  • These findings point to HNG (and possibly SHLP3) as promising candidates for future hearing‑protective supplements, especially for those exposed to ototoxic drugs or loud environments. However, human dosing, safety, and efficacy are not yet established, so biohackers should treat this as early‑stage evidence and await clinical trials before routine use.

Summary

The study shows that two mitochondrial peptides, a stronger version of humanin called HNG and another peptide called SHLP3, can protect ear hair cells from damage caused by the antibiotic gentamicin. They work by activating cell‑survival pathways (AKT and AMPK) and cutting down oxidative stress and inflammation. While the experiments were done in mouse ear tissue, not people, the results suggest these peptides might one day help protect hearing against drug‑induced or possibly noise‑related damage.

Abstract

Preservation of hair cells is critical for maintaining hearing function, as damage to sensory cells potentially leads to irreparable sensorineural hearing loss. Hair cell loss is often associated with inflammation and oxidative stress. One promising class of bioactive peptides is mitochondrial-derived peptides (MDPs), which have already been proven to protect various tissues from cellular stresses and delay aging processes. Humanin (HN) is one of the best-known members of this family, and recently, we have shown its protective effect in hair cells. The synthetic derivate HN S14G (HNG) has a more potent protective effect than natural HN making it a more useful peptide candidate to promote cytoprotection. A less-known MDP is small humanin-like peptide 3 (SHLP3), which has cytoprotective effects similar to HN, but likely acts through different signaling pathways. Therefore, we examined the effect of exogenous HNG and SHLP3 in auditory hair cells and investigated the molecular mechanisms involved. For this purpose, explants of the organ of Corti (OC) were treated with gentamicin in the presence and absence of HNG or SHLP3. Administration of HNG and SHLP3 reduced gentamicin-induced hair cell loss. The protective mechanisms of HNG and SHLP3 in OC explants included, in part, modulation of AKT and AMPKα. In addition, treatment with HNG and SHLP3 reduced gentamicin-induced oxidative stress and inflammatory gene overexpression. Overall, our data show that HNG and SHLP3 protect hair cells from gentamicin-induced toxicity. This offers new perspectives for the development of therapeutic strategies with MDPs against hearing loss.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2024

Date

2024-10-21T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1038/s41420-024-02215-9

Citations

2

References

41