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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 2
2021 pubmed 74 citations

Abnormal levels of mitochondrial proteins in plasma neuronal extracellular vesicles in major depressive disorder.

Goetzl. Edward J EJ; Wolkowitz. Owen M OM; Srihari. Vinod H VH; Reus. Victor I VI; Goetzl. Laura L; Kapogiannis. Dimitrios D; Heninger. George R GR; Mellon. Synthia H SH

Key Findings

  • Depressed participants showed significantly lower plasma neuron‑derived extracellular vesicle (NDEV) levels of humanin compared to healthy controls
  • SSRI‑responsive patients had their NDEV humanin levels return to normal after eight weeks, while non‑responders did not
  • Multiple other mitochondrial proteins were also altered in depression, indicating broader mitochondrial dysfunction

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the data suggest that supporting mitochondrial health—potentially via humanin‑boosting strategies like exercise, NAD+ precursors, or future humanin supplements—might aid mood and brain function, but concrete dosing or protocols aren’t established yet. Keep an eye on emerging research for validated humanin interventions.

Summary

The study found that people with major depression have lower levels of the protective peptide humanin in tiny particles released by brain cells into the blood, and that successful antidepressant treatment brings those levels back up. This points to a link between mood, brain mitochondria, and humanin, but doesn’t give a direct recipe for using humanin yet.

Abstract

To characterize neuronal mitochondrial abnormalities in major depressive disorder (MDD), functional mitochondrial proteins (MPs) extracted from enriched plasma neuron-derived extracellular vesicles (NDEVs) of MDD participants (n = 20) were quantified before and after eight weeks of treatment with a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI). Pretreatment baseline NDEV levels of the transcriptional type 2 nuclear respiratory factor (NRF2) which controls mitochondrial biogenesis and many anti-oxidant gene responses, regulators of diverse neuronal mitochondrial functions cyclophilin D (CYPD) and mitofusin-2 (MFN2), leucine zipper EF-hand containing transmembrane 1 protein (LETM1) component of a calcium channel/calcium channel enhancer, mitochondrial tethering proteins syntaphilin (SNPH) and myosin VI (MY06), inner membrane electron transport complexes I (subunit 6) and III (subunit 10), the penultimate enzyme of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) generation nicotinamide mononucleotide adenylytransferase 2 (NMNAT2), and neuronal mitochondrial metabolic regulatory and protective factors humanin and mitochondrial open-reading frame of the 12S rRNA-c (MOTS-c) all were significantly lower than those of NDEVs from matched controls (n = 10), whereas those of pro-neurodegenerative NADase Sterile Alpha and TIR motif-containing protein 1 (SARM1) were higher. The baseline NDEV levels of transcription factor A mitochondrial (TFAM) and the transcriptional master-regulator of mitochondrial biogenesis PPAR γ coactivator-1α (PGC-1α) showed no differences between MDD participants and controls. Several of these potential biomarker proteins showed substantially different changes in untreated MDD than those we reported in untreated first-episode psychosis. NDEV levels of MPs of all functional classes, except complex I-6, NRF2 and PGC-1α were normalized in MDD participants who responded to SSRI therapy (n = 10) but not in those who failed to respond (n = 10) by psychiatric evaluation. If larger studies validate NDEV MP abnormalities, they may become useful biomarkers and identify new drug targets.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2021

Date

2021-09-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1038/s41380-021-01268-x

Citations

74

References

32