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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 3
2011 pubmed 73 citations

A humanin derivative reduces amyloid beta accumulation and ameliorates memory deficit in triple transgenic mice.

Niikura. Takako T; Sidahmed. Elkhansa E; Hirata-Fukae. Chiho C; Aisen. Paul S PS; Matsuoka. Yasuji Y

Key Findings

  • Intranasal S14G‑HN improved memory performance in AD‑model mice
  • Brain amyloid‑beta levels were significantly reduced after treatment
  • Neprilysin, an amyloid‑degrading enzyme, was increased in treated mice

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the study hints that nasal delivery of humanin‑derived peptides might support brain health and amyloid clearance, but it’s still an early animal study. Until human trials confirm safety and dosing, it’s not ready for a DIY protocol, though it may inform future supplement or intranasal experiments.

Summary

A modified version of the tiny protein humanin, called S14G‑HN, was given through the nose to mice that model Alzheimer’s disease. After three months the mice showed better memory, lower brain amyloid‑beta levels, and higher activity of an enzyme that breaks down amyloid. The results suggest the peptide can both protect brain cells and help clear toxic plaques, at least in animals.

Abstract

Humanin (HN), a 24-residue peptide, was identified as a novel neuroprotective factor and shows anti-cell death activity against a wide spectrum of Alzheimer's disease (AD)-related cytotoxicities, including exposure to amyloid beta (Abeta), in vitro. We previously demonstrated that the injection of S14G-HN, a highly potent HN derivative, into brain ameliorated memory loss in an Abeta-injection mouse model. To fully understand HN's functions under AD-associated pathological conditions, we examined the effect of S14G-HN on triple transgenic mice harboring APP(swe), tau(P310L), and PS-1(M146V) that show the age-dependent development of multiple pathologies relating to AD. After 3 months of intranasal treatment, behavioral analyses showed that S14G-HN ameliorated cognitive impairment in male mice. Moreover, ELISA and immunohistochemical analyses showed that Abeta levels in brains were markedly lower in S14G-HN-treated male and female mice than in vehicle control mice. We also found the expression level of neprilysin, an Abeta degrading enzyme, in the outer molecular layer of hippocampal formation was increased in S14G-HN-treated mouse brains. NEP activity was also elevated by S14G-HN treatment in vitro. These findings suggest that decreased Abeta level in these mice is at least partly attributed to S14G-HN-induced increase of neprilysin level. Although HN was identified as an anti-neuronal death factor, these results indicate that HN may also have a therapeutic effect on amyloid accumulation in AD.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2011

Date

2011-01-17T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0016259

Citations

73

References

75