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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 3
2014 pubmed 45 citations

Protective role of humanin on bortezomib-induced bone growth impairment in anticancer treatment.

Eriksson. Emma E; Wickström. Malin M; Perup. Lova Segerström LS; Johnsen. John I JI; Eksborg. Staffan S; Kogner. Per P; Sävendahl. Lars L

Key Findings

  • HNG (humanin analog) fully prevented bortezomib‑induced bone growth slowdown in mice
  • The protective effect was due to blocking apoptosis and Bax/PARP activation in growth‑plate cells
  • HNG did not reduce bortezomib’s ability to slow tumor growth

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the data hint that humanin could be explored as a bone‑protective supplement during high‑stress or anti‑cancer regimens, but human dosing, safety, and effectiveness in healthy adults remain unknown. Until more human trials are done, using humanin for this purpose is speculative and should be approached with caution.

Summary

A lab study in mice found that a synthetic version of the human peptide humanin (called HNG) can stop a cancer drug called bortezomib from hurting bone growth, while still letting the drug kill tumors. The peptide blocked cell death signals in growth‑plate cartilage, so bones kept growing at a near‑normal rate. This suggests humanin might protect bone health during treatments that stress cells, but the work was done in animal models with a specific cancer drug, not in everyday health settings.

Abstract

Bortezomib is a proteasome inhibitor currently studied in clinical trials of childhood cancers. So far, no side effects on bone growth have been reported in treated children. However, bortezomib was recently found to induce apoptosis in growth plate chondrocytes and impair linear bone growth in treated mice. We hypothesize that [Gly(14)]-humanin (HNG), a 24-amino acid synthetic antiapoptotic peptide, can prevent bortezomib-induced bone growth impairment. Mice with human neuroblastoma or medulloblastoma tumor xenografts (9-13 animals/group) received one 2-week cycle (2 injections/week) of bortezomib (0.8 mg/kg or 1.0mg/kg), or HNG (1 µg/mouse), or the combination of HNG/bortezomib, or vehicle. Cultures of human growth plate cartilage, chondrogenic- and cancer cell lines, and immunohistochemistry for detection of proapoptotic proteins were also used. Statistical significance was evaluated by two-sided Mann-Whitney U test or by parametric or nonparametric analysis of variance. Bortezomib efficiently blocked the proteasome and induced pronounced impairment of linear bone growth from day 0 to day 13 (0.09 mm/day, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.07 to 0.11 mm/day; vs 0.19 mm/day, 95% CI = 0.15 to 0.23 mm/day in vehicle; P < .001), an effect significantly prevented by the addition of HNG (0.15 mm growth/day, 95% CI = 0.14 to 0.16 mm/day; P < .001 vs bortezomib only; P = 0.03 vs vehicle). Bortezomib was highly toxic when added to cultures of human growth plate cartilage, with markedly increased apoptosis compared with control (P < .001). However, when combining with HNG, bortezomib-induced apoptosis was entirely prevented, as was Bax and PARP activation. Bortezomib delayed tumor growth, and HNG did not interfere with the anticancer effect when studied in human tumor xenografts or cell lines. HNG prevents bortezomib-induced bone growth impairment without interfering with bortezomib's desired anticancer effects.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2014

Date

2014-03-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1093/jnci/djt459

Citations

45

References

65