Circulating humanin is lower in coronary artery disease and is a prognostic biomarker for major cardiac events in humans.
Cai. He H; Cao. Pengyu P; Sun. Wanqing W; Shao. Wangshu W; Li. Rongyu R; Wang. Lin L; Zou. Lin L; Forno. Erick E; Muzumdar. Radhika R; Gong. Zhenwei Z; Zheng. Yang Y
Key Findings
- Circulating humanin is significantly lower in patients with angina and even lower in heart‑attack patients compared to healthy controls
- Low humanin levels independently predict higher risk of major cardiac events (MACE) in the angina group
- Higher oxidative‑stress marker (TBARS) accompanies the low humanin levels in heart‑attack patients
Practical Outcomes
- Humanin looks promising as a blood marker to flag heart disease risk, but there’s no proven way for individuals to boost it yet. For now, focus on established heart‑health practices (diet, exercise, stress control) while keeping an eye on future research that might enable humanin‑based testing or therapies.
Summary
The study found that people with heart problems like unstable angina or heart attacks have lower levels of a naturally occurring peptide called humanin in their blood, and those low levels are linked to worse outcomes later on.
Abstract
Humanin is an endogenous mitochondria-derived peptide that plays critical roles in oxidative stress, inflammation and CAD. In this study, we measured the levels of circulating humanin, markers of oxidative stress and inflammation in patients with unstable angina and MI and studied the relationship between these parameters and major adverse cardiac events (MACE). A total of 327 subjects were recruited from the inpatient department at First Hospital of Jilin University and divided into 3 groups [control, angina and myocardial infarction (MI)] based on the clinical data and the results of the angiography. Serum humanin and thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) were measured at the time of initial admission. The hospitalization data and MACE of all patients were collected. Circulating humanin levels were lower in the angina group compared to controls [124.22 ± 63.02 vs. 157.77 ± 99.93 pg/ml, p < 0.05] and even lower in MI patients [67.17 ± 24.35 pg/ml, p < 0.05 vs controls] and oxidative stress marker were higher in MI patients compared to the control and angina groups [12.94 ± 4.55 vs. 8.26 ± 1.66 vs. 9.06 ± 2.47 umol/ml, p < 0.05]. Lower circulating humanin levels was an independent risk factor of MI patients. Circulating humanin levels could be used to predict MACE in angina group. Lower circulating humanin levels was an independent risk factor for CAD, and a potential prognostic marker for mild CAD. Humanin may become a new index for the diagnosis and treatment of CAD.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-09-12T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.bbagen.2021.130010
12
34