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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 2
2022 pubmed 57 citations

Cholinergic Neuron Targeting Nanosystem Delivering Hybrid Peptide for Combinatorial Mitochondrial Therapy in Alzheimer's Disease.

Qian. Kang K; Bao. Xiaoyan X; Li. Yixian Y; Wang. Pengzhen P; Guo. Qian Q; Yang. Peng P; Xu. Shuting S; Yu. Fazhi F; Meng. Ran R; Cheng. Yunlong Y; Sheng. Dongyu D; Cao. Jinxu J; Xu. Minjun M; Wu. Jing J; Wang. Tianying T; Wang. Yonghui Y; Xie. Qiong Q; Lu. Wei W; Zhang. Qizhi Q

Key Findings

  • A hybrid peptide (SS31 + S14G‑Humanin) can be loaded into a specially designed nanoparticle
  • The nanoparticle targets FGFR1, boosting brain and cholinergic neuron delivery 4.8‑fold
  • In AD mice, the treatment restores mitochondrial function, cuts amyloid‑β and tau buildup, and improves memory

Practical Outcomes

  • The study shows that pairing antioxidant and humanin‑based peptides may help brain health, but the required nanocarrier isn’t currently practical for self‑administration. For now, the main takeaway is that humanin analogs have promise for mitochondrial support, though more accessible delivery methods are needed.

Summary

Scientists made a tiny particle that carries a combined peptide (SS31 + a humanin variant) straight to brain cells that are damaged in Alzheimer’s. In mouse models, this delivery fixed the cells' power plants, lowered disease‑related proteins, and improved memory, but the method uses advanced nanotech not yet usable by everyday people.

Abstract

Mitochondrial dysfunction in neurons has recently become a promising therapeutic target for Alzheimer's disease (AD). Regulation of dysfunctional mitochondria through multiple pathways rather than antioxidation monotherapy indicates synergistic therapeutic effects. Therefore, we developed a multifunctional hybrid peptide HNSS composed of antioxidant peptide SS31 and neuroprotective peptide S14G-Humanin. However, suitable peptide delivery systems with excellent loading capacity and effective at-site delivery are still absent. Herein, the nanoparticles made of citraconylation-modified poly(ethylene glycol)-poly(trimethylene carbonate) polymer (PEG-PTMC(Cit)) exhibited desirable loading of HNSS peptide through electrostatic interactions. Meanwhile, based on fibroblast growth factor receptor 1(FGFR1) overexpression in both the blood-brain barrier and cholinergic neuron, an FGFR1 ligand-FGL peptide was modified on the nanosystem (FGL-NP(Cit)/HNSS) to achieve 4.8-fold enhanced accumulation in brain with preferred distribution into cholinergic neurons in the diseased region. The acid-sensitive property of the nanosystem facilitated lysosomal escape and intracellular drug release by charge switching, resulting in HNSS enrichment in mitochondria through directing of the SS31 part. FGL-NP(Cit)/HNSS effectively rescued mitochondria dysfunction via the PGC-1α and STAT3 pathways, inhibited Aβ deposition and tau hyperphosphorylation, and ameliorated memory defects and cholinergic neuronal damage in 3xTg-AD mice. The work provides a potential platform for targeted cationic peptide delivery, harboring utility for peptide therapy in other neurodegenerative diseases.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2022

Date

2022-07-15T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1021/acsnano.2c05795

Citations

57

References

67