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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 2
2002 pubmed

Death and survival of neuronal cells exposed to Alzheimer's insults.

Niikura. Takako T; Hashimoto. Yuichi Y; Tajima. Hirohisa H; Nishimoto. Ikuo I

Key Findings

  • Humanin prevents neuronal death caused by beta‑amyloid and familial Alzheimer’s gene mutations
  • Other growth factors protect against beta‑amyloid but not against the genetic mutations
  • Humanin does not protect cells from non‑Alzheimer’s related damage

Practical Outcomes

  • Humanin looks promising as a neuroprotective agent for Alzheimer’s‑related damage, but the research is still at the cell‑culture stage. No human dosage or safety data exist yet, so it isn’t ready for personal use or self‑experimentation. Keep an eye on future clinical trials for more actionable guidance.

Summary

The study shows that a tiny protein called Humanin can protect brain cells from dying when they’re exposed to the kinds of damage seen in Alzheimer’s disease, but it doesn’t help with other types of cell injury. This protection works against both the toxic beta‑amyloid protein and genetic mutations that cause familial Alzheimer’s, unlike some growth factors that only help with beta‑amyloid.

Abstract

Neuronal cell death is the central abnormality occurring in brains suffering from Alzheimer's disease (AD). The notion that AD is a disease caused by loss of neurons points toward suppression of neuronal death as the most important therapeutic target. Nevertheless, the mechanisms for neuronal death in AD are still relatively unclear. Three known mutant genes cause familial AD (FAD): amyloid precursor protein, presenilin 1, and presenilin 2. Detailed analysis of cytotoxic mechanisms of the FAD-linked mutant genes reveals that they cause neuronal cell death at physiologically low expression levels. Unexpectedly, cytotoxic mechanisms vary depending on the type of mutations and genes, suggesting that various mechanisms for neuronal cell death are involved in AD patients. In support of this, activity-dependent neurotrophic factor, basic fibroblast growth factor, and insulin-like growth factor-I can completely protect neurons from beta-amyloid (A beta) cytotoxicity but exhibit incomplete or little effect on cytotoxicity by FAD mutant genes. By contrast, Humanin, a newly identified 24-residue peptide, suppresses neuronal cell death by various FAD mutants and A beta, whereas this factor has no effect on cytotoxicity from AD-irrelevant insults. Studies investigating death and survival of neuronal cells exposed to AD insults will open a new horizon in developing therapy aimed at neuroprotection.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2002

Date

2002-11-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1002/jnr.10354