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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 2
2021 pubmed

Cardiac Left Ventricle Mitochondrial Dysfunction After Neonatal Exposure to Hyperoxia: Relevance for Cardiomyopathy After Preterm Birth.

Ravizzoni Dartora. Daniela D; Flahault. Adrien A; Pontes. Carolina N R CNR; He. Ying Y; Deprez. Alyson A; Cloutier. Anik A; Cagnone. Gaël G; Gaub. Perrine P; Altit. Gabriel G; Bigras. Jean-Luc JL; Joyal. Jean-Sébastien JS; Mai Luu. Thuy T; Burelle. Yan Y; Nuyt. Anne Monique AM

Key Findings

  • Neonatal hyperoxia in rats caused smaller, damaged heart mitochondria and reduced energy production
  • Preterm adults had lower circulating humanin levels compared to term adults
  • Lower humanin was associated with poorer left‑ventricle ejection fraction and strain measurements

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the main takeaway is that humanin levels may reflect heart health in people born preterm, but there is no proven protocol for boosting humanin yet. More research is needed before recommending humanin supplementation or specific interventions based on this study.

Summary

A study in rats showed that early‑life exposure to high oxygen levels damages heart mitochondria, and in humans born preterm, a mitochondrial peptide called humanin was lower in the blood and linked to heart function. This suggests that preterm birth may cause lasting heart cell problems and that humanin could be a marker or target, but the research is early and not yet a clear guide for supplementation or treatment.

Abstract

Individuals born preterm present left ventricle changes and increased risk of cardiac diseases and heart failure. The pathophysiology of heart disease after preterm birth is incompletely understood. Mitochondria dysfunction is a hallmark of cardiomyopathy resulting in heart failure. We hypothesized that neonatal hyperoxia in rats, a recognized model simulating preterm birth conditions and resulting in oxygen-induced cardiomyopathy, induce left ventricle mitochondrial changes in juvenile rats. We also hypothesized that humanin, a mitochondrial-derived peptide, would be reduced in young adults born preterm. Sprague-Dawley pups were exposed to room air (controls) or 80% O<sub>2</sub> at postnatal days 3 to 10 (oxygen-induced cardiomyopathy). We studied left ventricle mitochondrial changes in 4 weeks old males. In a cohort of young adults born preterm (n=55) and age-matched term (n=54), we compared circulating levels of humanin. Compared with controls, oxygen-exposed rats showed smaller left ventricle mitochondria with disrupted integrity on electron microscopy, decreased oxidative phosphorylation, increased glycolysis markers, and reduced mitochondrial biogenesis and abundance. In oxygen-exposed rats, we observed lipid deposits, increased superoxide production (isolated cardiomyocytes), and reduced <i>Nrf2</i> gene expression. In the cohort, left ventricle ejection fraction and peak global longitudinal strain were similar between groups however humanin levels were lower in preterm and associated with left ventricle ejection fraction and peak global longitudinal strain. In conclusion, neonatal hyperoxia impaired left ventricle mitochondrial structure and function in juvenile animals. Serum humanin level was reduced in preterm adults. This study suggests that preterm birth-related conditions entail left ventricle mitochondrial alterations that may underlie cardiac changes perpetuated into adulthood. Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT03261609.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2021

Date

2021-12-28T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1161/hypertensionaha.121.17979