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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 2
2019 pubmed 10 citations

Effects of prolonged type 2 diabetes on mitochondrial function in cerebral blood vessels.

Merdzo. Ivan I; Rutkai. Ibolya I; Sure. Venkata N L R VNLR; Katakam. Prasad V G PVG; Busija. David W DW

Key Findings

  • Basal mitochondrial respiration and proton leak are reduced in diabetic rats, similar to early‑stage disease
  • Rattin (the rat version of humanin) trends lower but the change isn’t statistically significant
  • Superoxide (ROS) levels are markedly higher in cerebral vessels of diabetic rats

Practical Outcomes

  • The study doesn’t give a direct protocol for humans, but it hints that chronic diabetes keeps oxidative stress high while humanin levels stay relatively stable. Biohackers might focus on antioxidant support rather than trying to boost humanin directly, and should watch for more human data before changing supplementation.

Summary

In rats with long‑term type 2 diabetes, the brain’s blood vessels show lower mitochondrial breathing activity, a slight (non‑significant) drop in the humanin‑like peptide rattin, and higher harmful superoxide levels, but overall the mitochondrial system seems to hold steady rather than get worse.

Abstract

One of the major characteristics of hyperglycemic states such as type 2 diabetes is increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation. Since mitochondria are a major source of ROS, it is vital to understand the involvement of these organelles in the pathogenesis of ROS-mediated conditions. Therefore, we investigated mitochondrial function and ROS production in cerebral blood vessels of 21-wk-old Zucker diabetic fatty obese rats and their lean controls. We have previously shown that in the early stages of insulin resistance, and short periods of type 2 diabetes mellitus, only mild differences exist in mitochondrial function. In the present study, we examined mitochondrial respiration, mitochondrial protein expression, and ROS production in large-surface cerebral arteries. We used 21-wk-old animals exposed to peak glucose levels for 7 wk and compared them with our previous studies on younger diabetic animals. We found that the same segments of mitochondrial respiration (basal respiration and proton leak) were diminished in diabetic groups as they were in younger diabetic animals. Levels of rattin, a rat humanin analog, tended to decrease in the diabetic group but did not reach statistical significance (<i>P</i> = 0.08). Other mitochondrial proteins were unaffected, which might indicate the existence of compensatory mechanisms with extension of this relatively mild form of diabetes. Superoxide levels were significantly higher in large cerebral vessels of diabetic animals compared with the control group. In conclusion, prolonged dietary diabetes leads to stabilization, rather than deterioration, of metabolic status in the cerebral circulation, despite continued overproduction of ROS.<b>NEW &amp; NOTEWORTHY</b> We have characterized for the first time the dynamics of mitochondrial function during the progression of type 2 diabetes mellitus with regard to mitochondrial respiration, protein expression, and reactive oxygen species production. In addition, this is the first measurement of rattin levels in the cerebral vasculature, which could potentially lead to novel treatment options.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2019

Date

2019-09-06T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1152/ajpheart.00341.2019

Citations

10

References

40