Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 1
2016 pubmed 190 citations

Whole-transcriptome brain expression and exon-usage profiling in major depression and suicide: evidence for altered glial, endothelial and ATPase activity.

Pantazatos. S P SP; Huang. Y-Y YY; Rosoklija. G B GB; Dwork. A J AJ; Arango. V V; Mann. J J JJ

Key Findings

  • Humanin‑like‑8 gene expression is altered in major depression
  • Immune, chemokine, and vascular development genes are reduced in depression and suicide brains
  • Exon usage of an ATPase gene is different in depression

Practical Outcomes

  • The findings hint that humanin‑related pathways might play a role in depression, but they don’t provide any direct guidance on using humanin supplements or protocols for health optimization.

Summary

A brain study of people who died by suicide or had major depression found that a gene similar to the peptide humanin (humanin‑like‑8) was changed in depressed brains, along with many immune and blood‑vessel related genes. The research is mostly about gene activity, not about taking humanin as a supplement.

Abstract

Brain gene expression profiling studies of suicide and depression using oligonucleotide microarrays have often failed to distinguish these two phenotypes. Moreover, next generation sequencing approaches are more accurate in quantifying gene expression and can detect alternative splicing. Using RNA-seq, we examined whole-exome gene and exon expression in non-psychiatric controls (CON, N=29), DSM-IV major depressive disorder suicides (MDD-S, N=21) and MDD non-suicides (MDD, N=9) in the dorsal lateral prefrontal cortex (Brodmann Area 9) of sudden death medication-free individuals post mortem. Using small RNA-seq, we also examined miRNA expression (nine samples per group). DeSeq2 identified 35 genes differentially expressed between groups and surviving adjustment for false discovery rate (adjusted P<0.1). In depression, altered genes include humanin-like-8 (MTRNRL8), interleukin-8 (IL8), and serpin peptidase inhibitor, clade H (SERPINH1) and chemokine ligand 4 (CCL4), while exploratory gene ontology (GO) analyses revealed lower expression of immune-related pathways such as chemokine receptor activity, chemotaxis and cytokine biosynthesis, and angiogenesis and vascular development in (adjusted P<0.1). Hypothesis-driven GO analysis suggests lower expression of genes involved in oligodendrocyte differentiation, regulation of glutamatergic neurotransmission, and oxytocin receptor expression in both suicide and depression, and provisional evidence for altered DNA-dependent ATPase expression in suicide only. DEXSEq analysis identified differential exon usage in ATPase, class II, type 9B (adjusted P<0.1) in depression. Differences in miRNA expression or structural gene variants were not detected. Results lend further support for models in which deficits in microglial, endothelial (blood-brain barrier), ATPase activity and astrocytic cell functions contribute to MDD and suicide, and identify putative pathways and mechanisms for further study in these disorders.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2016

Date

2016-08-16T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1038/mp.2016.130

Citations

190

References

94