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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 3
2020 pubmed 102 citations

Mitochondrial-derived peptides in energy metabolism.

Merry. Troy L TL; Chan. Alex A; Woodhead. Jonathan S T JST; Reynolds. Joseph C JC; Kumagai. Hiroshi H; Kim. Su-Jeong SJ; Lee. Changhan C

Key Findings

  • Circulating humanin and related peptides are lower in obesity, diabetes, and aging.
  • Exercise and some mitochondrial stress increase muscle expression of humanin‑type peptides.
  • Administering humanin to rodents improves insulin sensitivity and protects against metabolic disease.

Practical Outcomes

  • Humanin shows promise as a metabolic‑protective agent, but there’s no proven human dosing or supplement yet. Biohackers should watch for clinical trials and may consider experimental analogs only with caution, focusing first on proven strategies like regular exercise that naturally raise these peptides.

Summary

Mitochondrial peptides like humanin are naturally made in our cells and help protect against metabolic stress. People with obesity, diabetes, or who are older tend to have lower levels of these peptides, while exercise can boost them in muscle. In mouse studies, giving humanin improves insulin sensitivity and guards against age‑related metabolic problems, but human trials are still missing.

Abstract

Mitochondrial-derived peptides (MDPs) are small bioactive peptides encoded by short open-reading frames (sORF) in mitochondrial DNA that do not necessarily have traditional hallmarks of protein-coding genes. To date, eight MDPs have been identified, all of which have been shown to have various cyto- or metaboloprotective properties. The 12S ribosomal RNA (<i>MT-RNR1</i>) gene harbors the sequence for MOTS-c, whereas the other seven MDPs [humanin and small humanin-like peptides (SHLP) 1-6] are encoded by the 16S ribosomal RNA gene. Here, we review the evidence that endogenous MDPs are sensitive to changes in metabolism, showing that metabolic conditions like obesity, diabetes, and aging are associated with lower circulating MDPs, whereas in humans muscle MDP expression is upregulated in response to stress that perturbs the mitochondria like exercise, some mtDNA mutation-associated diseases, and healthy aging, which potentially suggests a tissue-specific response aimed at restoring cellular or mitochondrial homeostasis. Consistent with this, treatment of rodents with humanin, MOTS-c, and SHLP2 can enhance insulin sensitivity and offer protection against a range of age-associated metabolic disorders. Furthermore, assessing how mtDNA variants alter the functions of MDPs is beginning to provide evidence that MDPs are metabolic signal transducers in humans. Taken together, MDPs appear to form an important aspect of a retrograde signaling network that communicates mitochondrial status with the wider cell and to distal tissues to modulate adaptative responses to metabolic stress. It remains to be fully determined whether the metaboloprotective properties of MDPs can be harnessed into therapies for metabolic disease.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2020

Date

2020-08-10T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1152/ajpendo.00249.2020

Citations

102

References

55