Involvement of tyrosine kinases and STAT3 in Humanin-mediated neuroprotection.
Hashimoto. Yuichi Y; Suzuki. Hiroaki H; Aiso. Sadakazu S; Niikura. Takako T; Nishimoto. Ikuo I; Matsuoka. Masaaki M
Key Findings
- Humanin blocks neuron death caused by Alzheimer‑related stressors.
- Blocking the FPR2 receptor doesn’t stop Humanin’s protective effect.
- Humanin’s protection relies on STAT3 activation and certain tyrosine kinases, implying a different receptor mediates the benefit.
Practical Outcomes
- For now there’s no direct dosing or supplement advice, but the study hints that boosting STAT3 or related kinase pathways might enhance Humanin’s neuroprotective effects. Future protocols could focus on compounds that support these pathways alongside Humanin.
Summary
Humanin can protect brain cells from Alzheimer‑related damage, but it doesn’t work through the previously thought FPR2 receptor. Instead, it activates the STAT3 protein and some tyrosine‑kinase enzymes, meaning another yet‑unknown receptor is likely involved.
Abstract
Humanin (HN) inhibits neuronal cell death induced by various Alzheimer's disease (AD)-related insults. It has been proposed that HN binds to a putative receptor on the cell membrane and triggers a signal transduction cascade linked to neuroprotection. Recently, it was shown that HN binds to pertussis toxin (PTX)-sensitive G protein-coupled formylpeptide receptor-like-1 molecule (FPRL-1), reduces A beta(1--42) aggregation and fibril formation, and suppresses the A beta(1--42) toxicity on mononuclear phagocytic cells [Ying, G., Iribarren, P., Zhou, Y., Gong, W., Zhang, N., Yu, Z.X., Le, Y., Cui, Y., Wang, J.M., 2004. Humanin, a newly identified neuroprotective factor, uses the G protein-coupled formylpeptide receptor-like-1 as a functional receptor. Journal of Immunology 172 (11), 7078--7085.]. We here show that siRNA-mediated disruption of expression of the mouse counterpart of FPRL-1, FPR2, did not result in attenuation of HN-mediated rescue of neuronal cell death induced by AD-related insults. We simultaneously provide evidence that neuroprotection by HN in F11 cells is mediated by the STAT3 transcription factor as well as by certain tyrosine kinases. Altogether, we speculate that a receptor other than FPR2 exists that mediates HN neuroprotection in F11 neurohybrid cells.
Study Information
pubmed
2005
2005-07-06T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.lfs.2005.03.031