Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 2
2018 pubmed 117 citations

Mitochondrial peptides modulate mitochondrial function during cellular senescence.

Kim. Su-Jeong SJ; Mehta. Hemal H HH; Wan. Junxiang J; Kuehnemann. Chisaka C; Chen. Jingcheng J; Hu. Ji-Fan JF; Hoffman. Andrew R AR; Cohen. Pinchas P

Key Findings

  • Senescent human fibroblasts contain more mitochondria and show higher respiratory activity.
  • Levels of the mitochondrial peptide humanin (and MOTS‑c) rise naturally in senescent cells.
  • Adding humanin to doxorubicin‑induced senescent cells modestly increases mitochondrial respiration and selectively raises certain SASP factors via the JAK pathway.

Practical Outcomes

  • Humanin supplementation might influence the energy metabolism of aging cells, but the benefit appears small and could also amplify some inflammatory signals. For biohackers, there’s no clear dosing guideline or proven health advantage yet, so using humanin solely to combat cellular senescence is not strongly supported. It may be worth monitoring future studies for clearer protocols or safety data before incorporating it into longevity regimens.

Summary

The study found that aging cells (senescent fibroblasts) make more mitochondria and release more of the tiny protein humanin. Giving extra humanin to these cells slightly boosted their energy production but also nudged up some inflammatory signals (SASP) through a JAK pathway. This suggests humanin can tweak the metabolism of old cells, but the effects are modest and may have mixed consequences.

Abstract

Cellular senescence is a complex cell fate response that is thought to underlie several age-related pathologies. Despite a loss of proliferative potential, senescent cells are metabolically active and produce energy-consuming effectors, including senescence-associated secretory phenotypes (SASPs). Mitochondria play crucial roles in energy production and cellular signaling, but the key features of mitochondrial physiology and particularly of mitochondria-derived peptides (MDPs), remain underexplored in senescence responses. Here, we used primary human fibroblasts made senescent by replicative exhaustion, doxorubicin or hydrogen peroxide treatment, and examined the number of mitochondria and the levels of mitochondrial respiration, mitochondrial DNA methylation and the mitochondria-encoded peptides humanin, MOTS-c, SHLP2 and SHLP6. Senescent cells showed increased numbers of mitochondria and higher levels of mitochondrial respiration, variable changes in mitochondrial DNA methylation, and elevated levels of humanin and MOTS-c. Humanin and MOTS-c administration modestly increased mitochondrial respiration and selected components of the SASP in doxorubicin-induced senescent cells partially via JAK pathway. Targeting metabolism in senescence cells is an important strategy to reduce SASP production for eliminating the deleterious effects of senescence. These results provide insight into the role of MDPs in mitochondrial energetics and the production of SASP components by senescent cells.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2018

Date

2018-06-10T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.18632/aging.101463

Citations

117

References

61