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Humanin

HN, S14G-Humanin

Quick Stats
Studies 491
Trials 100
Score 1
2020 pubmed 17 citations

Biochemical determinants of the IGFBP-3-hyaluronan interaction.

Dorandish. Sadaf S; Devos. Jonathan J; Clegg. Bradley B; Price. Deanna D; Muterspaugh. Robert R; Guthrie. Jeffrey J; Heyl. Deborah L DL; Evans. Hedeel Guy HG

Key Findings

  • An 18‑amino‑acid segment of IGFBP‑3 binds both hyaluronan and humanin with similar strength to the full protein.
  • Glycosylation (sugar‑adding) or reduction of IGFBP‑3 does not affect its ability to bind hyaluronan or humanin.
  • Removing sugars from CD44 makes it better at competing with IGFBP‑3 for hyaluronan, while breaking CD44’s disulfide bonds weakens this competition.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this work is mostly mechanistic and doesn’t provide a clear protocol or dosage for humanin or IGFBP‑3 use. It suggests that the IGFBP‑3 peptide’s interaction with hyaluronan is robust to certain modifications, but translating this into health‑optimizing actions would require much more research.

Summary

The study shows that a short piece of the protein IGFBP‑3 can stick to both hyaluronan (a sugar molecule in the body) and humanin (a tiny peptide linked to aging). This binding isn’t changed by sugar‑coating or breaking the protein’s bonds, but the way another protein, CD44, is modified with sugars affects how it competes for hyaluronan. In lung cancer cells, blocking the hyaluronan‑CD44 link reduced cell survival, hinting the IGFBP‑3 piece can influence cell growth.

Abstract

IGFBP-3, the most abundant IGFBP and the main carrier of insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) in the circulation, can bind IGF-1 with high affinity, which attenuates IGF/IGF-IR interactions, thereby resulting in antiproliferative effects. The C-terminal domain of insulin-like growth factor-binding protein-3 (IGFBP-3) is known to contain an 18-basic amino acid motif capable of interacting with either humanin (HN) or hyaluronan (HA). We previously showed that the 18-amino acid IGFBP-3 peptide is capable of binding either HA or HN with comparable affinities to the full-length IGFBP-3 protein and that IGFBP-3 can compete with the HA receptor, CD44, for binding HA. Blocking the interaction between HA and CD44 reduced viability of A549 human lung cancer cells. In this study, we set out to better characterize IGFBP-3-HA interactions. We show that both stereochemistry and amino acid identity are important determinants of the interaction between the IGFBP-3 peptide and HA and for the peptide's ability to exert its cytotoxic effects. Binding of IGFBP-3 to either HA or HN was unaffected by glycosylation or reduction of IGFBP-3, suggesting that the basic 18-amino acid residue sequence of IGFBP-3 remains accessible for interaction with either HN or HA upon glycosylation or reduction of the full-length protein. Removing N-linked oligosaccharides from CD44 increased its ability to compete with IGFBP-3 for binding HA, while reduction of CD44 rendered the protein relatively ineffective at blocking IGFBP-3-HA interactions. We conclude that both deglycosylation and disulfide bond formation are important for CD44 to compete with IGFBP-3 for binding HA.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2020

Date

2020-07-22T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1002/2211-5463.12919

Citations

17

References

78