Amelioration of neurodegenerative diseases by cell death-induced cytoplasmic delivery of humanin.
Park. Tae-Yoon TY; Kim. Seung-Hyung SH; Shin. Yoon-Chul YC; Lee. Nae-Hyun NH; Lee. Rae-Kyung Christina RK; Shim. Jae-Hyuck JH; Glimcher. Laurie H LH; Mook-Jung. Inhee I; Cheong. Eunji E; Kim. Won-Ki WK; Honda. Fumiko F; Morio. Tomohiro T; Lim. Jong-Soon JS; Lee. Sang-Kyou SK
Key Findings
- tHN‑C3, a engineered humanin, can cross the blood‑brain barrier and enter neurons
- It blocks caspase‑3 activation, preventing early apoptosis in Alzheimer’s‑related stress conditions
- In mouse and rat models it reduced brain cell loss, inflammation, and improved cognitive performance, matching the effect of Aricept
Practical Outcomes
- The study points to a promising brain‑targeted humanin therapy, but it’s still pre‑clinical. For biohackers, the takeaway is to watch for future human trials of BBB‑penetrant humanin analogs, rather than trying to apply this specific peptide now.
Summary
Scientists created a modified version of the peptide humanin that can cross the brain’s protective barrier and stop cell‑death signals, showing it protects brain cells and improves memory in mouse models of Alzheimer’s and stroke, performing as well as the drug Aricept. However, this work is still in animals, so it isn’t ready for personal use yet.
Abstract
Inhibition of the early intracellular event that triggers neurodegenerative cascades and reversal of neuronal cell death are essential for effective treatment of Alzheimer's disease (AD). In this study, a novel therapeutic for AD, a transducible humanin with an extended caspase-3 cleavage sequence (tHN-C3), was developed and showed multiple mechanisms of therapeutic action. These included targeted delivery of anti-apoptotic protein humanin through the blood-brain barrier (BBB) to neuronal cells, specific inhibition of caspase-3 activation to inhibit the early triggering of AD progression, and delivery of humanin into the cytoplasm of neuronal cells undergoing apoptosis where it exerts its anti-apoptotic functions effectively. The tHN-C3 prevented neuronal cell death induced by H2O2, or soluble Aβ42, via Bax binding. In animal models of AD induced by amyloid beta, in Tg2576 mice, and in the rat middle cerebral artery occlusion model of stroke, tHN-C3 effectively prevented neuronal cell death, inflammatory cell infiltration into the brain, and improved cognitive memory. The therapeutic effectiveness of tHN-C3 was comparable to that of Aricept, a clinically approved drug for AD treatment. Therefore, tHN-C3 may be a new remedy with multiple therapeutic functions targeting the early and late stages of neurodegeneration in AD and other brain injuries.
Study Information
pubmed
2013
2013-01-05T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.jconrel.2012.12.022
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