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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 3
2019 pubmed 39 citations

Metabolomic profile of diet-induced obesity mice in response to humanin and small humanin-like peptide 2 treatment.

Mehta. Hemal H HH; Xiao. Jialin J; Ramirez. Ricardo R; Miller. Brendan B; Kim. Su-Jeong SJ; Cohen. Pinchas P; Yen. Kelvin K

Key Findings

  • HNG and SHLP2 significantly altered plasma amino acid and lipid metabolites in diet‑induced obese mice
  • Glutathione metabolism showed the strongest response, suggesting enhanced antioxidant capacity
  • Sphingolipid metabolism was markedly affected, a pathway linked to insulin sensitivity and metabolic health

Practical Outcomes

  • The results hint that short‑term humanin‑type peptide treatment may favorably reshape metabolism, but the study is in mice with intraperitoneal injections at 2.5 mg/kg twice daily. For biohackers, this suggests potential benefit but requires human safety data, appropriate dosing routes, and monitoring of metabolic markers before practical use.

Summary

In obese mice, giving a humanin analog (HNG) or a related peptide (SHLP2) for three days changed many blood metabolites, especially boosting antioxidant glutathione and shifting sphingolipid levels, which points to improved insulin sensitivity and reduced age‑related metabolic stress.

Abstract

The mitochondrial-derived peptides (MDPs) are a novel group of natural occurring peptides that have important signaling functions and biological activity. Both humanin and small-humanin-like peptide 2 (SHLP2) have been reported to act as insulin sensitizers and modulate metabolism. By using a metabolomic approach, this study explores how the plasma metabolite profile is regulated in response to humanin and SHLP2 treatment in a diet-induced obesity (DIO) mouse model. The results also shed light on the potential mechanism underlying MDPs' insulin sensitization effects. Plasma samples were obtained from DIO mice subjected to vehicle (water) treatment, or peptide treatment with either humanin analog S14G (HNG) or SHLP2 (n = 6 per group). Vehicle or peptides were given as intraperitoneal (IP) injections twice a day at dose of 2.5 mg/kg/injection for 3 days. Metabolites in plasma samples were comprehensively identified and quantified using UPLC-MS/MS. HNG and SHLP2 administration significantly altered the concentrations of amino acid and lipid metabolites in plasma. Among all the metabolic pathways, the glutathione and sphingolipid metabolism responded most strongly to the peptide treatment. The present study indicates that humanin and SHLP2 can lower several markers associated with age-related metabolic disorders. With the previous understanding of the effects of humanin and SHLP2 on cardiovascular function, insulin sensitization, and anti-inflammation, this metabolomic discovery provides a more comprehensive molecular explanation of the mechanism of action for humanin and SHLP2 treatment.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2019

Date

2019-06-06T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1007/s11306-019-1549-7

Citations

39

References

63