Humanin preserves endothelial function and prevents atherosclerotic plaque progression in hypercholesterolemic ApoE deficient mice.
Oh. Yun K YK; Bachar. Adi R AR; Zacharias. David G DG; Kim. Sung Gyun SG; Wan. Junxiang J; Cobb. Laura J LJ; Lerman. Lilach O LO; Cohen. Pinchas P; Lerman. Amir A
Key Findings
- Humanin analogue HNGF6A prevented endothelial dysfunction and reduced atherosclerotic plaque size in high‑cholesterol ApoE‑deficient mice
- The benefit occurred without lowering blood cholesterol or altering systemic cytokine levels
- Treatment lowered oxidative stress markers and cell death in plaques while preserving nitric‑oxide synthase expression
Practical Outcomes
- Humanin shows promise as a cardiovascular‑protective agent in animal models, but there’s no human data yet. Biohackers might view it as a candidate for experimental use, yet dosage, safety, and effectiveness in people remain unknown, so caution and further research are advised.
Summary
In mice that are prone to develop artery plaque, a synthetic version of the mitochondrial peptide humanin (called HNGF6A) given daily for 4 months helped keep blood vessels working properly and made the plaques smaller, even though it didn’t lower cholesterol or change overall inflammation levels.
Abstract
Humanin (HN) is a cytoprotective peptide derived from endogenous mitochondria, expressed in the endothelial layer of human vessels, but its role in atherogenesis in vivo is not known. In vitro study, however, HN reduced oxidized low-density lipoprotein induced formation of reactive oxygen species and apoptosis. The present study tested the hypothesis that long term treatment with HN will have a protective role against endothelial dysfunction and progression of atherosclerosis in vivo. Daily intraperitonial injection of the HN analogue HNGF6A for 16 weeks prevented endothelial dysfunction and decreased atherosclerotic plaque size in the proximal aorta of ApoE-deficient mice fed on a high cholesterol diet, without showing direct vasoactive effects or cholesterol-reducing effects. HN was expressed in the endothelial layer on the aortic plaques. HNGF6A treatment reduced apoptosis and nitrotyrosine immunoreactivity in the aortic plaques without affecting the systemic cytokine profile. HNGF6A also preserved expression of endothelial nitric oxide synthase in aorta. HN may have a protective effect on endothelial function and progression of atherosclerosis by modulating oxidative stress and apoptosis in the developing plaque.
Study Information
pubmed
2011
2011-06-25T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.atherosclerosis.2011.06.038
107
30