Humanin (HN) and glucose transporter 8 (GLUT8) in pregnancies complicated by intrauterine growth restriction.
Janzen. Carla C; Lei. Margarida Y Y MYY; Jeong. Il Seok D ISD; Ganguly. Amit A; Sullivan. Peggy P; Paharkova. Vladislava V; Capodanno. Gina G; Nakamura. Hiromi H; Perry. Alix A; Shin. Bo-Chul BC; Lee. Kuk-Wha KW; Devaskar. Sherin U SU
Key Findings
- Humanin levels are increased in the maternal side of IUGR placentas, especially in extravillous trophoblast cells
- Humanin and GLUT8 physically interact in these cells
- Both humanin and GLUT8 rise under simulated low‑oxygen (hypoxia) conditions, while only humanin rises when cells are starved of serum
Practical Outcomes
- Humanin appears to be a stress‑responsive peptide that may help cells cope with low oxygen, hinting it could have protective roles beyond pregnancy. For biohackers, this suggests potential benefits of humanin in hypoxic or metabolic stress, but the study provides no dosing or protocol guidance yet.
Summary
The study found that the mitochondrial peptide humanin is higher in the part of the placenta that contacts the mother in pregnancies where the baby is not growing enough, and it rises when cells are low on oxygen. Humanin also sticks together with a sugar‑transport protein called GLUT8, and both go up under low‑oxygen conditions, but only humanin goes up when nutrients are scarce. These results show humanin reacts to stress in pregnancy tissue, but they don’t give any direct tips for using humanin in health‑hacking.
Abstract
Intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) results from a lack of nutrients transferred to the developing fetus, particularly oxygen and glucose. Increased expression of the cytoprotective mitochondrial peptide, humanin (HN), and the glucose transporter 8, GLUT8, has been reported under conditions of hypoxic stress. However, the presence and cellular localization of HN and GLUT8 in IUGR-related placental pathology remain unexplored. Thus, we undertook this study to investigate placental expression of HN and GLUT8 in IUGR-affected versus normal pregnancies. We found 1) increased HN expression in human IUGR-affected pregnancies on the maternal aspect of the placenta (extravillous trophoblastic (EVT) cytoplasm) compared to control (i.e. appropriate for gestational age) pregnancies, and a concomitant increase in GLUT8 expression in the same compartment, 2) HN and GLUT8 showed a protein-protein interaction by co-immunoprecipitation, 3) elevated HN and GLUT8 levels in vitro under simulated hypoxia in human EVT cells, HTR8/SVneo, and 4) increased HN expression but attenuated GLUT8 expression in vitro under serum deprivation in HTR8/SVneo cells. There was elevated HN expression with cytoplasmic localization to EVTs on the maternal aspect of the human placenta affected by IUGR, also associated with increased GLUT8 expression. We found that while hypoxia increased both HN and GLUT8, serum deprivation increased HN expression alone. Also, a protein-protein interaction between HN and GLUT8 suggests that their interaction may fulfill a biologic role that requires interdependency. Future investigations delineating molecular interactions between these proteins are required to fully uncover their role in IUGR-affected pregnancies.
Study Information
pubmed
2018
2018-03-28T00:00:00.000Z
10.1371/journal.pone.0193583
21
60