Humanin: a possible linkage between Alzheimer's disease and type 2 diabetes.
Mahboobi. Hamidreza H; Golmirzaei. Javad J; Gan. Siew H SH; Jalalian. Mehrdad M; Kamal. Mohammad A MA
Key Findings
- Alzheimer’s disease is more common and progresses faster in type 2 diabetes patients.
- Humanin is a mitochondrial‑derived peptide with neuroprotective effects that can modulate mechanisms involved in both AD and T2DM.
- Insulin resistance, oxidative stress, advanced glycation end‑products, lipid metabolism disturbances, and inflammation are common pathways linking AD and T2DM, and drugs like NSAIDs, IL‑1 antagonists, and statins may affect both.
Practical Outcomes
- Humanin is still experimental, so there’s no dosage or supplement protocol to follow. Instead, focus on lifestyle actions that hit the same pathways: improve insulin sensitivity with low‑carb or time‑restricted eating and regular exercise, lower oxidative stress with antioxidant‑rich foods, fasting, or supplements, and keep inflammation down with omega‑3s, adequate sleep, and, if appropriate, anti‑inflammatory drugs under medical supervision.
Summary
The article explains that people with type 2 diabetes are more likely to develop Alzheimer’s disease and that it progresses faster. It highlights a tiny mitochondrial peptide called humanin that can protect brain cells and may influence the same harmful processes seen in both conditions, such as insulin resistance, oxidative stress, advanced glycation end‑products, and low‑grade inflammation. Humanin itself isn’t a marketed supplement yet, but the findings suggest that targeting these shared pathways could be beneficial.
Abstract
The prevalence of Alzheimer's disease (AD) is higher among type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) patients. In T2DM patients, the progression of AD is more rapid. Furthermore, several pathophysiological pathways are common to AD and T2DM. Humanin is a recently introduced, mitochondrial-derived peptide with neuroprotective effects. Humanin can alter the mechanisms involved in AD and T2DM pathogenesis. Insulin resistance as well as oxidative stress has been shown to be associated with increased amyloid deposition in brain neurons and islet beta cells. Moreover, advanced glycation end products and lipid metabolism disorders are common pathways of oxidative stress and low-grade systemic inflammation in AD and T2DM. These common pathways may explain AD and T2DM pathogenesis and suggest common treatments for both diseases. Treatments for T2DM and AD attempt to slow cognitive decline, and recent investigations have focused on agents that may alter pathways common to AD and T2DM pathogenesis. Non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs, such as interleukin-1 antagonists and statins, are possible drug candidates for both AD and T2DM.
Study Information
pubmed
2014
2014-03-31T00:00:00.000Z
10.2174/1871527312666131223110147
20
130