Humanin peptide suppresses apoptosis by interfering with Bax activation.
Guo. Bin B; Zhai. Dayong D; Cabezas. Edelmira E; Welsh. Kate K; Nouraini. Shahrzad S; Satterthwait. Arnold C AC; Reed. John C JC
Key Findings
- Humanin directly binds to Bax and blocks its activation
- Reducing humanin levels makes cells more sensitive to Bax‑induced apoptosis
- Humanin prevents Bax from reaching mitochondria and stops cytochrome c release, even in isolated mitochondria
Practical Outcomes
- Humanin appears to protect cells from stress‑induced death, suggesting it could be a useful anti‑aging or tissue‑protective agent. However, the research is limited to cell models with no human dosing data, so it’s not yet ready for concrete supplementation protocols. Enthusiasts might watch for future trials or consider low‑dose peptide experiments only with caution and professional guidance.
Summary
The study shows that the tiny protein humanin can stick to a cell‑death trigger called Bax and stop it from moving to the mitochondria, which blocks the cascade that leads to cell death. When humanin levels are lowered, cells become more vulnerable to Bax‑driven death. Both the nuclear‑encoded and mitochondrial‑encoded versions of humanin work the same way.
Abstract
Bax (Bcl2-associated X protein) is an apoptosis-inducing protein that participates in cell death during normal development and in various diseases. Bax resides in an inactive state in the cytosol of many cells. In response to death stimuli, Bax protein undergoes conformational changes that expose membrane-targeting domains, resulting in its translocation to mitochondrial membranes, where Bax inserts and causes release of cytochrome c and other apoptogenic proteins. It is unknown what controls conversion of Bax from the inactive to active conformation. Here we show that Bax interacts with humanin (HN), an anti-apoptotic peptide of 24 amino acids encoded in mammalian genomes. HN prevents the translocation of Bax from cytosol to mitochondria. Conversely, reducing HN expression by small interfering RNAs sensitizes cells to Bax and increases Bax translocation to membranes. HN peptides also block Bax association with isolated mitochondria, and suppress cytochrome c release in vitro. Notably, the mitochondrial genome contains an identical open reading frame, and the mitochondrial version of HN can also bind and suppress Bax. We speculate therefore that HN arose from mitochondria and transferred to the nuclear genome, providing a mechanism for protecting these organelles from Bax.
Study Information
pubmed
2003
2003-05-04T00:00:00.000Z
10.1038/nature01627
595
22