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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 2
2008 pubmed 42 citations

The multiple T-maze in vivo testing of the neuroprotective effect of humanin analogues.

Kunesová. Gabriela G; Hlavácek. Jan J; Patocka. Jirí J; Evangelou. Alexandra A; Zikos. Christos C; Benaki. Dimitra D; Paravatou-Petsotas. Maria M; Pelecanou. Maria M; Livaniou. Evangelia E; Slaninova. Jirina J

Key Findings

  • Full‑length humanin core (RG‑PAGA) peptides restored spatial memory in rats regardless of leucine count
  • Most truncated or tert‑Leu modified analogues were inactive
  • Colivelin and its des‑Leu version showed the strongest memory‑restoring effect

Practical Outcomes

  • At this stage the results are not ready for direct use by biohackers—humanin analogues would need to be formulated for humans and tested for safety and dosing. However, the data highlight colivelin as a promising candidate for future cognitive‑support supplements or therapies, so keep an eye on upcoming human trials.

Summary

Scientists tested several versions of the peptide humanin in rats and found that only certain full‑length forms, especially the hybrid peptide colivelin, could reverse drug‑induced memory problems. Shortened or modified versions didn’t work. This suggests that specific humanin analogues might help protect brain function, but the work is still early and done in animals.

Abstract

Humanin (HN) and its analogues have been shown to protect cells against death induced by various Alzheimer's disease (AD) genes and amyloid-beta-peptides in vitro; the analogues [Gly(14)]-HN and colivelin have also been shown to be potent in reversing learning and memory impairment induced by scopolamine or quinuclidinyl benzilate (QNB) in mice or rats in vivo using the Y-maze or multiple T-maze tests. This paper describes the activity of new peptides of the HN family, after i.p. administration, on QNB-induced impairment of spatial memory in the multiple T-maze test in rats. The following peptides have been studied: HN analogues truncated either on the C- or N-terminus, or analogues having a tert-Leu in place of Leu in the central part of the molecule, the active HN core PAGASRLLLLTGEIDLP (RG-PAGA) and its analogues having three or five leucines instead of four, and finally the recently described hybrid peptide colivelin (i.e. a peptide having the activity-dependent neurotrophic factor SALLRSIPA attached to the N-terminus of the active RG-PAGA) and its des-Leu- and plus-Leu-analogues. While the truncated analogues and most of the tert-Leu containing analogues were devoid of activity, the analogues of the RG-PAGA were active, i.e. they reversed the impairment of spatial memory irrespective of the number of Leu present in their sequence. The highest activity was shown by colivelin and its des-Leu-analogue. These results demonstrate the potential of HN analogues in the modulation of the cholinergic system, which plays an important role in the cognitive deficits associated with AD and other neurodegenerative diseases.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2008

Date

2008-07-05T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.peptides.2008.06.019

Citations

42

References

26