Humanin binds and nullifies Bid activity by blocking its activation of Bax and Bak.
Zhai. Dayong D; Luciano. Frederic F; Zhu. Xiuwen X; Guo. Bin B; Satterthwait. Arnold C AC; Reed. John C JC
Key Findings
- Humanin directly binds to Bid and its active fragment tBid
- Binding blocks tBid‑driven release of death‑signaling molecules from mitochondria
- Humanin prevents Bax and Bak from forming lethal complexes, protecting cells from apoptosis
Practical Outcomes
- The study suggests that boosting Humanin levels might help protect cells from stress‑induced death, a concept of interest for longevity and health‑span strategies. However, it’s an early‑stage lab finding with no human dosage or protocol, so more research is needed before practical use.
Summary
Humanin, a tiny protein made by our bodies, can stick to a cell‑death trigger called Bid and stop it from activating other death proteins, which helps keep cells alive. This effect works even when another death protein, Bax, isn’t present, showing Humanin’s broad protective role against cell damage.
Abstract
Recently, we discovered that Humanin (HN), a small endogenous peptide of 24 amino acids, binds to and inhibits the proapoptotic protein Bax. We show here that HN also interacts with the BH3-only Bcl-2/Bax family protein, Bid, as well as a truncated form of Bid (tBid) associated with protease-mediated activation of this proapoptotic protein. Synthetic HN peptide binds purified Bid and tBid in vitro and blocks tBid-induced release of cytochrome c and SMAC from isolated mitochondria, whereas mutant peptides that fail to bind Bid or tBid lack this activity. Moreover, HN peptide also retained protective activity on bax-/-mitochondria, indicating that HN can block tBid-induced release of apoptogenic proteins from these organelles in a Bax-independent manner. HN peptide inhibits tBid-induced oligomerization of Bax and Bak in mitochondrial membranes, as shown by experiments with chemical cross-linkers or gel filtration. Gene transfection experiments showed that HN (but not an inactive mutant of HN) also protects intact cells from apoptosis induced by overexpression of tBid. We conclude that Bid represents an additional cellular target of HN, and we propose that HN-mediated suppression of Bid contributes to the antiapoptotic activity of this endogenous peptide.
Study Information
pubmed
2005
2005-01-20T00:00:00.000Z
10.1074/jbc.m411902200