The Mitochondrial-Derived Peptides, HumaninS14G and Small Humanin-like Peptide 2, Exhibit Chaperone-like Activity.
Okada. Alan K AK; Teranishi. Kazuki K; Lobo. Fleur F; Isas. J Mario JM; Xiao. Jialin J; Yen. Kelvin K; Cohen. Pinchas P; Langen. Ralf R
Key Findings
- HNG and SHLP2 inhibit IAPP amyloid formation at sub‑stoichiometric concentrations
- They bind specifically to misfolded, seed‑competent IAPP species, not to normal monomers
- This chaperone‑like activity suggests a new therapeutic angle for type‑2 diabetes and other protein‑misfolding diseases
Practical Outcomes
- While there’s no ready‑to‑use supplement protocol yet, the study signals that humanin‑based compounds could become future anti‑diabetes agents. Biohackers should watch for clinical trials and consider pairing mitochondrial health practices (e.g., NAD+ boosters, exercise) with emerging humanin research.
Summary
Researchers found that two tiny proteins made by mitochondria, called HNG (a humanin variant) and SHLP2, can stop the sticky clumps of a diabetes‑related protein (IAPP) from forming, even at very low amounts. They work by latching onto the early, misfolded clumps rather than the normal protein, acting like a molecular chaperone, which could protect pancreatic cells and help manage type‑2 diabetes in the future.
Abstract
Mitochondrial-derived peptides (MDPs) and their analogs have emerged as wide-spectrum, stress response factors protective in amyloid disease models. MDP cytoprotective functions are generally attributed to anti-apoptotic activity, however, little is known about their capacity to facilitate the cell's unfolded protein response via direct interactions with amyloidogenic proteins. Here, we explored the effects of the MDP-analog, humaninS14G (HNG), and the MDP, small humanin-like peptide 2 (SHLP2), on the misfolding of islet amyloid polypeptide (IAPP), a critical pathogenic step in type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Our thioflavin T fluorescence studies show that HNG inhibits IAPP misfolding at highly substoichiometric concentrations. Seeded fluorescence and co-sedimentation studies demonstrate MDPs block amyloid seeding and directly bind misfolded, seeding-capable IAPP species. Furthermore, our electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy and circular dichroism data indicate MDPs do not act by binding IAPP monomers. Taken together our results reveal a novel chaperone-like activity wherein these MDPs specifically target misfolded amyloid seeds to inhibit IAPP misfolding which, along with direct anti-apoptotic activity and beneficial metabolic effects, make HNG and SHLP2 exciting prospects as T2DM therapeutics. These data also suggest that other mitochondrial stress response factors within the MDP family may be amenable to development into therapeutics for protein-misfolding diseases.
Study Information
pubmed
2017
2017-08-10T00:00:00.000Z
10.1038/s41598-017-08372-5
50
41