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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 3
2003 pubmed

The cytoplasmic domain of Alzheimer's amyloid-beta protein precursor causes sustained apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1/c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase-mediated neurotoxic signal via dimerization.

Hashimoto. Yuichi Y; Niikura. Takako T; Chiba. Tomohiro T; Tsukamoto. Emi E; Kadowaki. Hisae H; Nishitoh. Hideki H; Yamagishi. Yohichi Y; Ishizaka. Miho M; Yamada. Marina M; Nawa. Mikiro M; Terashita. Kenzo K; Aiso. Sadakazu S; Ichijo. Hidenori H; Nishimoto. Ikuo I

Key Findings

  • Dimerization of the amyloid‑beta precursor’s cytoplasmic domain activates ASK1/JNK signaling leading to neuronal death
  • Blocking ASK1 prevents this death, while activating ASK1 causes death that can be rescued by humanin
  • Humanin specifically suppresses ASK1/JNK‑driven neuronal death in the experimental model

Practical Outcomes

  • Humanin appears to have neuroprotective effects against pathways linked to Alzheimer’s disease, indicating it could be a candidate for longevity or brain‑health strategies. However, the evidence is limited to cell studies, so no dosing or supplementation protocol can be recommended yet; further animal and human research is needed.

Summary

The study shows that a protein fragment from the Alzheimer's precursor can cause brain cells to die, but a small peptide called humanin can stop this cell death in lab experiments. This suggests humanin might protect neurons from certain Alzheimer‑related damage, though the work is still at the cell‑culture stage.

Abstract

The biological function of full-length amyloid-beta protein precursor (AbetaPP), the precursor of Abeta, is not fully understood. Multiple laboratories have reported that antibody binding to cell surface AbetaPP causes neuronal cell death. Here we examined whether induced dimerization of the cytoplasmic domain of AbetaPP (AbetaPPCD) triggers neuronal cell death. In neurohybrid cells expressing fusion constructs of the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor with AbetaPPCD (EGFR/AbetaPP hybrids), EGF drastically enhanced neuronal cell death in a manner sensitive to acetyl-l-aspartyl-l-glutamyl-l-valyl-l-aspartyl-aldehyde (Ac-DEVD-CHO; DEVD), GSH-ethyl ester (GEE), and pertussis toxin (PTX). Dominant-negative apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 (ASK1) blocked this neuronal cell death, but not alpha-synuclein-induced cell death. Constitutively active ASK1 (caASK1) caused DEVD/GEE-sensitive cell death in a manner resistant to PTX and sensitive to Humanin, which also suppressed neuronal cell death by EGFR/AbetaPP hybrid. ASK1 formed a complex with AbetaPPCD via JIP-1b, the c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK)-interacting protein. EGFR/AbetaPP hybrid-induced and caASK1-induced neuronal cell deaths were specifically blocked by SP600125 (anthra[1,9-cd]pyrazol-6(2H)-one), a specific JNK inhibitor. Combined with our earlier study, these data indicate that dimerization of AbetaPPCD triggers ASK1/JNK-mediated neuronal cell death. We also noticed a potential role of ASK1/JNK in sustaining the activity of this mechanism after initial activation by AbetaPP, which allows for the achievement of cell death by short-term anti-AbetaPP antibody treatment. Understanding the function of AbetaPPCD and its downstream pathway should lead to effective anti-Alzheimer's disease therapeutics.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2003

Date

2003-06-26T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1124/jpet.103.051383