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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 2
2012 pubmed 56 citations

Humanin prevents intra-renal microvascular remodeling and inflammation in hypercholesterolemic ApoE deficient mice.

Zhang. Xin X; Urbieta-Caceres. Victor H VH; Eirin. Alfonso A; Bell. Caitlin C CC; Crane. John A JA; Tang. Hui H; Jordan. Kyra L KL; Oh. Yun-Kyu YK; Zhu. Xiang-Yang XY; Korsmo. Michael J MJ; Bachar. Adi R AR; Cohen. Pinchas P; Lerman. Amir A; Lerman. Lilach O LO

Key Findings

  • Humanin lowered kidney microvascular remodeling and media/lumen ratio in high‑cholesterol ApoE‑deficient mice
  • It reduced inflammatory markers like MCP‑1, TNF‑alpha and osteopontin in the kidneys
  • Humanin decreased signs of apoptosis and fibrosis, suggesting overall kidney protection

Practical Outcomes

  • Humanin shows potential as a kidney‑protective agent in early atherosclerosis, but the evidence is limited to animal models with injectable dosing. For biohackers, it’s a promising target for future research rather than a protocol you can safely try now. More human studies are needed before considering supplementation or dosing strategies.

Summary

In a mouse study, the naturally occurring peptide humanin helped protect kidneys from damage caused by high cholesterol, reducing tiny blood‑vessel changes, inflammation and cell death. The work was done in genetically modified mice and used daily injections, so it’s not yet a ready‑to‑use treatment for people.

Abstract

Humanin (HN) is an endogenous mitochondrial-derived cytoprotective peptide that has shown protective effects against atherosclerosis and is expressed in human vessels. However, its effects on the progression of kidney disease are unknown. We hypothesized that HN would protect the kidney in the early phase of atherogenesis. Forty-eight mice were studied in four groups (n=12 each). Twenty-four ApoE deficient mice were fed a 16-week high-cholesterol diet supplemented with saline or HN (4mg/kg/day, intraperitoneal). C57BL/6 mice were fed a normal diet supplemented with saline or HN. Microvascular architecture was assessed with micro-CT and vascular wall remodeling by alpha-SMA staining. The effects of HN on angiogenesis, inflammation, apoptosis and fibrosis were evaluated in the kidney tissue by Western blotting and histology. Cortical microvascular spatial density and media/lumen area ratio were significantly increased in high-cholesterol diet fed ApoE deficient mice, but restored by HN. HN up-regulated the renal expressions of anti-angiogenic proteins angiostatin and TSP-1, and inhibited angiopoietin-1. HN attenuated inflammation by down-regulating MCP-1, TNF-alpha and osteopontin. HN also tended to restore pSTAT3 and attenuated Bax expression, suggesting blunted apoptosis. Kidney collagen IV expression was alleviated by HN treatment. HN attenuates renal microvascular remodeling, inflammation and apoptosis in the early stage of kidney disease in hypercholesterolemic ApoE(-/-) mice. HN may serve as a novel therapeutic target to mitigate kidney damage in early atherosclerosis.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2012

Date

2012-07-20T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.lfs.2012.07.010

Citations

56

References

40