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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 2
2008 pubmed 7 citations

The complex structure transition of Humanin peptides by sodium dodecylsulfate and trifluoroethanol.

Kita. Yoshiko Y; Niikura. Takako T; Arisaka. Fumio F; Arakawa. Tsutomu T

Key Findings

  • Both HNG and AGA-(C8R)HNG17 shift to a similar structure in higher SDS (≥0.05%) or TFE (30‑40%) concentrations
  • In plain PBS, HNG tends to aggregate, but adding just 0.1% SDS makes the solution uniform
  • Structural changes occur below the critical micelle concentration, indicating molecular‑level interactions rather than micelle‑mediated effects

Practical Outcomes

  • When preparing Humanin peptides for research or potential self‑administration, using low levels of surfactants like SDS may help keep the peptide soluble and prevent aggregation. However, because SDS and TFE aren’t suitable for human use, the findings mainly guide formulation and storage choices rather than direct dosing protocols.

Summary

The study shows that two Humanin‑like peptides change shape in complex ways when mixed with the detergent SDS or the solvent TFE, becoming more uniform at higher concentrations and less clumped together. This behavior happens even below the level where SDS forms micelles, meaning the peptide interacts directly with individual detergent molecules.

Abstract

We have examined the structure of two Humanin (HN) analog peptides, HNG and AGA-(C8R)HNG17, in the presence of sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS) and trifluoroethanol (TFE) using CD and sedimentation velocity. Both HNG and AGA-(C8R)HNG17 underwent complex conformational changes with increasing concentrations of SDS and TFE, in contrast to general trend of increasing alpha-helix with their concentration. To our surprise, both peptides appear to converge into a similar structure in SDS and TFE at higher concentrations; e.g., above 0.05 % SDS or 30-40 % TFE. Sedimentation velocity analysis showed extensive aggregation of HNG at 0.1 mg/ml in PBS in the absence of SDS, but a highly homogeneous solution in 0.1 % SDS, indicating formation of a uniform structure by SDS. These two peptides also formed an intermediate structure both in SDS and TFE at lower concentrations, which appeared to be associated with extensive aggregation. It is interesting that the structure changes of these peptides occur well below the critical micelle concentration of SDS, suggesting that conformational changes are mediated through molecular, not micellar, interactions with SDS.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2008

Date

2008-05-31T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.2174/092986608784567555

Citations

7