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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 3
2014 pubmed 9 citations

The effect of sex on humanin levels in healthy adults and patients with uncomplicated type 1 diabetes mellitus.

Lytvyn. Yuliya Y; Wan. Junxiang J; Lai. Vesta V; Cohen. Pinchas P; Cherney. David Z I DZ

Key Findings

  • Diabetic men have higher circulating humanin than diabetic women and healthy men
  • In healthy men, higher humanin correlates with lower blood pressure
  • In diabetic men, higher humanin correlates with lower plasma cGMP; no clear correlations in women

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, humanin levels appear to be influenced by sex and diabetes status, so any supplementation might need to be tailored accordingly. Monitoring blood pressure could help gauge humanin’s impact in men, but more research is needed before concrete dosing protocols can be recommended.

Summary

The study found that people with type 1 diabetes, especially men, have higher blood levels of the protective peptide humanin compared to women and healthy men. In healthy men, more humanin was linked to lower blood pressure, while in diabetic men it was linked to lower cGMP, a molecule involved in blood vessel function. Women showed no clear patterns. These sex‑specific differences suggest that humanin’s effects on vascular health may vary between men and women.

Abstract

Diabetes mellitus (DM) is associated with a loss of renal and vascular protection in women compared with men, but the responsible mechanisms are unclear. Recent experimental work implicated humanin (HN) as a novel cytoprotective hormone in DM. Our goal was to measure sex-related differences in HN levels in uncomplicated type 1 DM patients (T1D) and healthy controls (HC), as well as the interaction between HN, circulating neurohormones, and vascular function. Plasma HN, cGMP and aldosterone, blood pressure (BP), glomerular filtration rate, and effective renal plasma flow (inulin and para-aminohippurate) were measured in HC (11 men, 10 women) and T1D (23 men and 18 women) during clamped euglycemia (4-6 mmol·L(-1)). Plasma HN levels were generally lower in HC men by comparison with the women, but the differences were not statistically significant. In contrast, levels in the T1D men were higher compared with the T1D women (p = 0.026) and HC men (p < 0.0001). In the HC men, but not the women, HN correlated negatively with BP, but not with renal function, cGMP, or aldosterone. In the T1D men, HN negatively correlated with plasma cGMP. In the T1D women, HN did not correlate with neurohormones or vascular function. Future work should determine the role of HN in the pathogenesis of sex-related vascular function differences in DM.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2014

Date

2014-12-18T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1139/cjpp-2014-0401

Citations

9

References

45