A humanin analog decreases oxidative stress and preserves mitochondrial integrity in cardiac myoblasts.
Klein. Laura E LE; Cui. Lingguang L; Gong. Zhenwei Z; Su. Kai K; Muzumdar. Radhika R
Key Findings
- HNG sharply reduces ROS levels in heart cells exposed to oxidative stress
- It preserves mitochondrial membrane potential, ATP production, and mitochondrial structure
- HNG rapidly activates catalase and glutathione peroxidase and lowers the oxidized/reduced glutathione ratio
- The protective effect requires simultaneous activity of both c‑Abl and Arg kinases
Practical Outcomes
- The results suggest that humanin analogs could be a promising way to protect heart cells from oxidative damage and support mitochondrial health, which is attractive for longevity and performance goals. However, because the study is limited to cell cultures, there’s no guidance on dosing, safety, or effectiveness in humans, so biohackers should treat it as an interesting lead that needs much more research before practical use.
Summary
A lab study found that a synthetic version of the natural peptide humanin (called HNG) can quickly boost antioxidant defenses in heart cells, lowering harmful reactive oxygen species and keeping the cells' energy factories (mitochondria) healthy when they’re stressed. The effect depends on two specific proteins, Abl and Arg, and happens within minutes, but the work was done in rat heart cells, not people.
Abstract
A potent analog (HNG) of the endogenous peptide humanin protects against myocardial ischemia-reperfusion (MI-R) injury in vivo, decreasing infarct size and improving cardiac function. Since oxidative stress contributes to the damage from MI-R we tested the hypotheses that: (1) HNG offers cardioprotection through activation of antioxidant defense mechanisms leading to preservation of mitochondrial structure and that, (2) the activity of either of a pair of non-receptor tyrosine kinases, c-Abl and Arg is required for this protection. Rat cardiac myoblasts (H9C2 cells) were exposed to nanomolar concentrations of HNG and to hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). Cells treated with HNG in the presence of H2O2 demonstrated reduced intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS), preserved mitochondrial membrane potential, ATP levels and mitochondrial structure. HNG induced activation of catalase and glutathione peroxidase (GPx) within 5 min and decreased the ratio of oxidized to reduced glutathione within 30 min. siRNA knockdown of both Abl and Arg, but neither alone, abolished the HNG-mediated reduction of ROS in myoblasts exposed to H2O2. These findings demonstrate an HNG-mediated, Abl- and Arg-dependent, rapid and sustained activation of critical cellular defense systems and attenuation of oxidative stress, providing mechanistic insights into the observed HNG-mediated cardioprotection in vivo.
Study Information
pubmed
2013
2013-08-25T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.bbrc.2013.08.055
81
28