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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 2
2014 pubmed 12 citations

Humanin rescues cultured rat cortical neurons from NMDA-induced toxicity not by NMDA receptor.

Cui. Ai-Ling AL; Li. Jian-Zhong JZ; Feng. Zhi-Bo ZB; Ma. Guo-Lin GL; Gong. Liang L; Li. Chun-Ling CL; Zhang. Ce C; Li. Kefeng K

Key Findings

  • Humanin rescues rat cortical neurons from NMDA‑induced toxicity in vitro
  • The protective effect is dose‑dependent with an IC50 of 0.132 nmol/L
  • Humanin does not prevent NMDA‑triggered calcium overload, indicating it works via a different mechanism

Practical Outcomes

  • Humanin shows strong neuroprotective activity in cell models, suggesting it could be a candidate for brain‑health supplements, but there’s no human data, dosing guidelines, or delivery method yet. Biohackers should treat this as early‑stage research and wait for animal or clinical studies before trying it.

Summary

Humanin, a tiny protein originally found in Alzheimer’s patients, can protect rat brain cells in a dish from damage caused by an excitatory chemical called NMDA, but it does this without blocking the NMDA receptor itself. The protection works at very low (nanomolar) doses, though the exact way it helps isn’t clear yet.

Abstract

Excitatory neurotoxicity has been implicated in many pathological situations and there is no effective treatment available. Humanin is a 24-aa peptide cloned from the brain of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). In the present study, excitatory toxicity was induced by N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) in primarily cultured rat cortical neurons. MTT assessment, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release, and calcein staining were employed to evaluate the protective activity of humanin on NMDA induced toxicity. The results suggested that NMDA (100 μmol/L, 2.5 hr) triggered neuronal morphological changes, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release (166% of the control), reduction of cell viability (about 50% of the control), and the decrease of living cell density (about 50% of the control). When pretreated with humanin, the toxicity was suppressed. The living cells' density of humanin treated group was similar to that of control. The cell viability was attenuated dose-dependently (IC50 = 0.132 nmol/L). The LDH release was also neutralized in a dose-dependent manner. In addition, the intracellular Ca(2+) overloading triggered by NMDA reverted quickly and humanin could not inhibit it. These findings indicate that humanin can rescue cortical neurons from NMDA-induced toxicity in rat but not through interfering with NMDA receptor directly.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2014

Date

2014-05-19T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1155/2014/341529

Citations

12

References

38