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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 2
2018 pubmed 36 citations

Cardiomyocyte hypertrophy induced by Endonuclease G deficiency requires reactive oxygen radicals accumulation and is inhibitable by the micropeptide humanin.

Blasco. Natividad N; Cámara. Yolanda Y; Núñez. Estefanía E; Beà. Aida A; Barés. Gisel G; Forné. Carles C; Ruíz-Meana. Marisol M; Girón. Cristina C; Barba. Ignasi I; García-Arumí. Elena E; García-Dorado. David D; Vázquez. Jesús J; Martí. Ramon R; Llovera. Marta M; Sanchis. Daniel D

Key Findings

  • ENDOG deficiency leads to ROS buildup and cardiomyocyte hypertrophy in rodent cells
  • ROS scavengers prevent the abnormal growth caused by ENDOG loss
  • Nanomolar humanin restores normal ROS levels and cell size despite ENDOG deficiency

Practical Outcomes

  • Humanin shows promise as a molecule that could curb oxidative stress‑driven heart cell enlargement, hinting at potential heart‑protective or anti‑aging uses. However, the data are early‑stage and from animal cells, so safe human dosing, efficacy, and long‑term effects remain unknown. Biohackers should view this as a mechanistic clue rather than a ready‑to‑use supplement protocol.

Summary

Researchers found that when a mitochondrial protein called ENDOG is missing, heart cells grow too big because of excess reactive oxygen species (ROS). Adding tiny amounts of the naturally occurring peptide humanin fixed the ROS problem and stopped the cells from enlarging. This suggests humanin might help protect heart cells from stress‑related growth, but the work was done in newborn rodent cells, not humans.

Abstract

The endonuclease G gene (Endog), which codes for a mitochondrial nuclease, was identified as a determinant of cardiac hypertrophy. How ENDOG controls cardiomyocyte growth is still unknown. Thus, we aimed at finding the link between ENDOG activity and cardiomyocyte growth. Endog deficiency induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation and abnormal growth in neonatal rodent cardiomyocytes, altering the AKT-GSK3β and Class-II histone deacethylases (HDAC) signal transduction pathways. These effects were blocked by ROS scavengers. Lack of ENDOG reduced mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) replication independently of ROS accumulation. Because mtDNA encodes several subunits of the mitochondrial electron transport chain, whose activity is an important source of cellular ROS, we investigated whether Endog deficiency compromised the expression and activity of the respiratory chain complexes but found no changes in these parameters nor in ATP content. MtDNA also codes for humanin, a micropeptide with possible metabolic functions. Nanomolar concentrations of synthetic humanin restored normal ROS levels and cell size in Endog-deficient cardiomyocytes. These results support the involvement of redox signaling in the control of cardiomyocyte growth by ENDOG and suggest a pathway relating mtDNA content to the regulation of cell growth probably involving humanin, which prevents reactive oxygen radicals accumulation and hypertrophy induced by Endog deficiency.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2018

Date

2018-03-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.redox.2018.02.021

Citations

36

References

43