Humanin and colivelin: neuronal-death-suppressing peptides for Alzheimer's disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
Matsuoka. Masaaki M; Hashimoto. Yuichi Y; Aiso. Sadakazu S; Nishimoto. Ikuo I
Key Findings
- Humanin activates a Jak2/STAT3 pathway that helps neurons survive
- A modified version, HNG17, is about 100,000 times more potent than natural Humanin in vitro
- Colivelin, a fusion peptide, protects neurons at femtomolar concentrations and works in mouse models of AD and ALS
Practical Outcomes
- The main takeaway is that Humanin‑based peptides show strong neuroprotective effects in experimental settings, suggesting they could become future anti‑aging or neuro‑protective supplements. However, without human trials or dosage data, biohackers should treat this as a promising research signal rather than a ready‑to‑use protocol.
Summary
Humanin is a tiny protein that can protect brain cells from dying, and scientists have made even stronger versions called HNG17 and colivelin that work at incredibly low doses in lab dishes and mouse models of Alzheimer’s and ALS. While the results look promising, they’re still early‑stage and haven’t been tested in people, so there’s no clear dosing or safety guide for everyday use yet.
Abstract
Humanin (HN), a 24-amino-acid neuroprotective peptide, was originally found in the occipital lobe of an autopsied Alzheimer's disease (AD) patient. HN inhibits neuronal death by binding to its specific receptor on the cell membrane and triggering a Jak2/STAT3 prosurvival pathway. The activation of this pathway may represent a therapeutic approach to AD. HN also exhibits neuroprotective activity against toxicity by familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)-related mutant superoxide dismutase (SOD1). Recent investigations established that AGA-(C8R)-HNG17, a 17-amno-acid derivative of HN, is 10(5) times more potent as a neuroprotective than HN; at 10-picomolar and higher concentrations in vitro it completely suppresses neuronal death. Moreover, a 26-amino-acid peptide colivelin (CL), composed of activity-dependent neurotrophic factor (ADNF) C-terminally fused to AGA-(C8R)-HNG17, provides complete neuroprotection at 100-femtomolar or higher concentrations in vitro. A series of experiments using mouse AD and ALS models further established the efficacy of HN derivatives, including CL, against these diseases in vivo. HN and CL can be viewed as drug candidates for neuronal death suppression therapy in AD or ALS.
Study Information
pubmed
2006
10.1111/j.1527-3458.2006.00113.x