Oxidative Damage? Not a Problem! The Characterization of Humanin-like Mitochondrial Peptide in Anoxia Tolerant Freshwater Turtles.
Wijenayake. Sanoji S; Storey. Kenneth B KB
Key Findings
- A humanin homologue (TSE‑humanin) is present in red‑eared slider turtles
- Protein levels were measured in brain and six peripheral tissues during normal conditions, 5 h and 20 h of anoxia
- The peptide may play a cytoprotective role against oxidative damage during prolonged oxygen deprivation
Practical Outcomes
- The study hints that humanin could be a useful molecule for protecting cells from oxidative stress, but it’s an early animal‑model finding. Biohackers should view it as supportive evidence for humanin’s potential, not a ready‑to‑use protocol, and await human studies before adding it to regimens.
Summary
Researchers found a humanin-like peptide in red‑eared slider turtles that seems to help protect cells from damage when the animals go without oxygen for long periods, suggesting the peptide may act as a natural antioxidant guard in extreme conditions.
Abstract
Mitochondria was long thought to be an "end function" organelle that regulated the metabolic flux and apoptosis in the cell. However, with the discovery of the mitochondrial peptide (MDP) humanin (HN/MTRNR2), the cytoprotective and pro-survival applications of MDPs have taken the forefront of therapeutic and diagnostic research. However, the regulation of humanin-like MDPs in natural model systems that can tolerate lethal environmental and cytotoxic insults remains to be investigated. Red-eared sliders are champion anaerobes that can withstand three continuous months of anoxia followed by rapid bouts of oxygen reperfusion without incurring cellular damage. Freshwater turtles employ extensive physiological and biochemical strategies to combat anoxia, with metabolic rate depression and a global enhancement of antioxidant and cytoprotective pathways being the two most important contributors. The main aim of this study was to uncover and characterize the humanin-homologue in freshwater turtles as well as investigate the differential regulation of humanin in response to short and long-term oxygen deprivation. In this study we have used de novo and homology-based protein modelling to elucidate the putative structure of humanin in red-eared sliders as well as an ELISA and western immunoblotting to confirm the protein abundance in the turtle brain and six peripheral tissues during control, 5 h, and 20 h anoxia (n = 4/group). We found that a humanin-homologue (TSE-humanin) is present in red-eared sliders and it may play a cytoprotective role against oxidative damage.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-01-02T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s10930-020-09944-7
8
109