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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 2
2005 pubmed 43 citations

Humanin detected in skeletal muscles of MELAS patients: a possible new therapeutic agent.

Kariya. Shingo S; Hirano. Makito M; Furiya. Yoshiko Y; Sugie. Kazuma K; Ueno. Satoshi S

Key Findings

  • Humanin levels are markedly increased in ragged‑red (energy‑deficient) muscle fibers of MELAS patients, especially type 1 fibers.
  • Humanin is located inside mitochondria and also rises in small arteries with high succinate dehydrogenase activity.
  • Synthetic humanin added to cultured muscle cells boosts cellular ATP production.

Practical Outcomes

  • Humanin may be a promising molecule for enhancing mitochondrial energy production, but current evidence is limited to disease tissue observations and cell‑culture experiments. No dosage, safety, or efficacy data exist for healthy people, so biohackers should treat it as experimental and await further clinical research before trying it.

Summary

Humanin is a tiny protein that seems to help cells make more energy. In a rare mitochondrial disease (MELAS), patients' muscle fibers showed higher levels of humanin, especially in energy‑hungry type 1 fibers, and lab tests showed that adding synthetic humanin raised ATP in muscle cells. This hints it could support mitochondrial health, but there’s no human dosing or safety data yet.

Abstract

Humanin (HN) was originally identified as an endogenous peptide that protects neuronal cells from apoptosis induced by various types of Alzheimer's disease-related insults. We have previously indicated that HN increases cellular ATP levels and speculated that this peptide may rescue energy-deficient cells in mitochondrial disorders. Here, we report, for the first time, increased HN expression in skeletal muscles from patients with mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS). HN was strongly positive in all ragged-red fibers (RRFs) and some non-RRFs, and most of them were type 1 fibers generally requiring higher energy than type 2 fibers. HN in these fibers was localized in mitochondria. HN expression was also increased in small arteries that strongly reacted for succinate dehydrogenase. Our experiments on muscular TE671 cells indicated the possibility that synthesized HN increases cellular ATP levels by directly acting on mitochondria. From these in vivo and in vitro findings, we propose that HN expression might be induced in response to the energy crisis within affected fibers and vessels in MELAS muscles and further be a possible therapeutic candidate for MELAS.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2005

Date

2005-03-10T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1007/s00401-004-0965-5

Citations

43

References

30