Humaninobservational2023

Stability Determination of Intact Humanin-G with Characterizations of Oxidation and Dimerization Patterns.

Biomolecules

confidence

Key findings

Analytical study characterizing HNG degradation, oxidation, and dimerization patterns; no clinical or biological endpoints reported.

View source on PubMed (PMID 36979450) ↗

Sample size
Not reported
Population
In vitro HNG peptide stability study
Dosing
Not reported
Duration
Up to 28 days
Route
Not applicable (in vitro)
Blinding
not_reported
Controls
none
Drug class
mitochondrial peptide
Full abstract

Humanin is the first identified mitochondrial-derived peptide. Humanin-G (HNG) is a variant of Humanin that has significantly higher cytoprotective properties. Here, we describe the stability features of HNG in different conditions and characterize HNG degradation, oxidation, and dimerization patterns over short-term and long-term periods. HNG solutions were prepared in high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) water or MO formulation and stored at either 4 °C or 37 °C. Stored HNG samples were analyzed using HPLC and high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS). Using HPLC, full-length HNG peptides in HPLC water decreased significantly with time and higher temperature, while HNG in MO formulation remained stable up to 95% at 4 °C on day 28. HNG peptides in HPLC water, phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and MO formulation were incubated at 37 °C and analyzed at day 1, day 7 and day 14 using HRMS. Concentrations of full-length HNG peptide in HPLC water and PBS declined over time with a corresponding appearance of new peaks that increased over time. These new peaks were identified to be singly oxidized HNG, doubly oxidized HNG, homodimerized HNG, singly oxidized homodimerized HNG, and doubly oxidized homodimerized HNG. Our results may help researchers improve the experimental design to further understand the critical role of HNG in human diseases.

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