Activity-dependent neurotrophic factor, ADNF, determines the structure characteristics of Colivelin, a fusion protein of ADNF9 and Humanin analog.
Arakawa. Tsutomu T; Niikura. Takako T; Arisaka. Fumio F; Kita. Yoshiko Y
Key Findings
- Humanin protects neurons at subānanomolar to micromolar levels.
- ADNF9 protects neurons at femtomolar levels, much more potent than Humanin.
- The fused peptide Colivelin shows neuroprotective activity at femtomolar concentrations, 10³ā10ā· times stronger than Humanin alone.
- Colivelinās structure and stability resemble ADNF9 rather than Humanin, staying monomeric in solution.
Practical Outcomes
- At this point the findings are not ready for personal use; they highlight that peptide fusion can dramatically boost neuroprotective potency, but human safety, dosing, and delivery methods remain unknown. Biohackers should treat this as a promising research lead to watch for future clinical developments rather than a protocol to try now.
Summary
Scientists fused two braināprotective peptides, Humanin and ADNF9, creating a new molecule called Colivelin that is far more potent at protecting neurons in lab testsāup to a millionāfold stronger than Humanin alone. The new peptide behaves structurally like ADNF9 and stays stable, unlike Humanin which tends to clump together. However, the work is still earlyāstage and only done in testātube conditions, so thereās no guidance yet on how to use it safely in people.
Abstract
A 24-amino acid long peptide, Humanin, protects neurons from Alzheimer's disease (AD)-related cell toxicities at sub-nM-uM concentrations. Activity-dependent neurotrophic factor (ADNF) is a glia-derived neurotrophic peptide, which protects neurons from tetrodoxin treatment and AD-related and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis-related insults at fM concentrations. An attempt was made to further improve the activity of Humanin by fusing this peptide to ADNF9, a 9-amino acid long core peptide of the ADNF. This fusion resulted in a novel molecule, termed Colivelin, with the neuroprotective activity at fM range, which is approximately 10(3)-10(7) fold higher than the activity of Humanin and Humanin analogs and follows the activity profile of fM-active ADNF9. We have characterized the structural properties of Colivelin and compared with those of ADNF9 and Humanin in water and phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). The secondary structure of Colivelin was similar to that of ADNF9, but not that of Humanin, and hence was not the average of the contributions of the two peptides fused. Colivelin was stable and monomeric in PBS, consistent with the monomeric property of ADNF9, while Humanin showed strong tendency to self-associate. Thus, it is evident that the structural properties of Colivelin resemble those of ADNF9, rather than those of Humanin.
Study Information
pubmed
2008
2008-05-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1002/psc.959
8
19