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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 2
2013 pubmed

SH3-binding protein 5 mediates the neuroprotective effect of the secreted bioactive peptide humanin by inhibiting c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase.

Takeshita. Yuji Y; Hashimoto. Yuichi Y; Nawa. Mikiro M; Uchino. Hiroyuki H; Matsuoka. Masaaki M

Key Findings

  • Humanin raises SH3BP5 mRNA and protein levels in neurons
  • SH3BP5 binds to and directly inhibits JNK activity
  • Increasing SH3BP5 mimics humanin’s protective effect, while removing SH3BP5 weakens it

Practical Outcomes

  • Right now the work is done in cells, so there’s no dosage or supplement guide for humans. It does suggest that humanin’s neuro‑protective benefits may come from JNK inhibition, which could inform future supplement or drug development, but more animal and human studies are needed before any actionable protocol.

Summary

The study shows that the tiny protein humanin can protect brain cells by turning on another protein called SH3BP5, which then blocks a stress‑related enzyme (JNK) that usually leads to cell death in Alzheimer‑type conditions.

Abstract

Humanin is a secreted bioactive peptide that suppresses cell toxicity caused by a variety of insults. The neuroprotective effect of Humanin against Alzheimer disease (AD)-related death is mediated by the binding of Humanin to its heterotrimeric Humanin receptor composed of ciliary neurotrophic receptor α, WSX-1, and gp130, as well as the activation of intracellular signaling pathways including a JAK2 and STAT3 signaling axis. Despite the elucidation of the signaling pathways by which Humanin mediates its neuroprotection, the transcriptional targets of Humanin that behaves as effectors of Humanin remains undefined. In the present study, Humanin increased the mRNA and protein expression of SH3 domain-binding protein 5 (SH3BP5), which has been known to be a JNK interactor, in neuronal cells. Similar to Humanin treatment, overexpression of SH3BP5 inhibited AD-related neuronal death, while siRNA-mediated knockdown of endogenous SH3BP5 expression attenuated the neuroprotective effect of Humanin. These results indicate that SH3BP5 is a downstream effector of Humanin. Furthermore, biochemical analysis has revealed that SH3BP5 binds to JNK and directly inhibits JNK through its two putative mitogen-activated protein kinase interaction motifs (KIMs).

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2013

Date

2013-07-16T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1074/jbc.m113.469692