Detailed characterization of neuroprotection by a rescue factor humanin against various Alzheimer's disease-relevant insults.
Hashimoto. Y Y; Niikura. T T; Ito. Y Y; Sudo. H H; Hata. M M; Arakawa. E E; Abe. Y Y; Kita. Y Y; Nishimoto. I I
Key Findings
- Humanin blocks neurotoxicity from many familial Alzheimer’s disease gene mutants and amyloid‑beta peptides
- The S14G variant (HNG) is more broadly protective than IGF‑I or basic FGF
- Specific amino acids (Cys8, Ser14, and residues 3‑19) are crucial for the protective effect
Practical Outcomes
- Humanin and its HNG variant look promising for future Alzheimer’s therapies, but there’s no dosage or safety data for self‑use yet. Biohackers should treat this as early‑stage research and wait for clinical trials before considering supplementation.
Summary
The study shows that the small protein humanin can protect brain cells from damage caused by several Alzheimer’s‑related proteins and peptides, and a modified version (HNG) works even better than some growth factors, but it doesn’t help against all types of brain stress. This work is still in cell experiments, so it’s not yet a ready‑to‑use treatment for people.
Abstract
A novel factor, termed Humanin (HN), antagonizes against neurotoxicity by various types of familial Alzheimer's disease (AD) genes [V642I and K595N/M596L (NL) mutants of amyloid precursor protein (APP), M146L-presenilin (PS) 1, and N141I-PS2] and by Abeta1-43 with clear action specificity ineffective on neurotoxicity by polyglutamine repeat Q79 or superoxide dismutase 1 mutants. Here we report that HN can also inhibit neurotoxicity by other AD-relevant insults: other familial AD genes (A617G-APP, L648P-APP, A246E-PS1, L286V-PS1, C410Y-PS1, and H163R-PS1), APP stimulation by anti-APP antibody, and other Abeta peptides (Abeta1-42 and Abeta25-35). The action specificity was further indicated by the finding that HN could not suppress neurotoxicity by glutamate or prion fragment. Against the AD-relevant insults, essential roles of Cys(8) and Ser(14) were commonly indicated, and the domain from Pro(3) to Pro(19) was responsible for the rescue action of HN, in which seven residues turned out to be essential. We also compared the neuroprotective action of S14G HN (HNG) with that of activity-dependent neurotrophic factor, IGF-I, or basic FGF for the antagonism against various AD-relevant insults (V642I-APP, NL-APP, M146L-PS1, N141I-PS2, and Abeta1-43). Although all of these factors could abolish neurotoxicity by Abeta1-43, only HNG could abolish cytotoxicities by all of them. HN and HN derivative peptides may provide a new insight into the study of AD pathophysiology and allow new avenues for the development of therapeutic interventions for various forms of AD.
Study Information
pubmed
2001
2001-12-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1523/jneurosci.21-23-09235.2001