Quick Comparison
| AICAR | Humanin | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | 2-3 hours | 0.5-4 hours (varies by analogue; HNG has extended activity) |
| Typical Dosage | Research: 150-500 mg subcutaneous or IV once daily. Extremely expensive due to high dosing requirements (milligram quantities needed). Often cycled 4-8 weeks. | No established clinical dosing. Research analogue (HNG — humanin G): most commonly used form. User-reported: 1-5 mg subcutaneous once daily. Often cycled 4-8 weeks. |
| Administration | Subcutaneous or intravenous injection | Subcutaneous injection (research) |
| Research Papers | 30 papers | 30 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
AICAR
AICAR (5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide ribonucleoside) is a nucleoside analogue that, upon cellular uptake, is phosphorylated by adenosine kinase to ZMP (5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide-1-β-D-ribofuranosyl 5'-monophosphate). ZMP is structurally analogous to AMP and mimics its binding to the gamma regulatory subunit of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), allosterically activating the kinase without requiring actual energy depletion or ATP consumption.
AMPK is the cell's master energy sensor and metabolic regulator. Under normal conditions, AMPK is activated when the AMP/ATP ratio rises during energy stress (exercise, fasting, hypoxia). By pharmacologically activating AMPK independently of energy status, AICAR triggers the same metabolic adaptations that exercise produces. AMPK phosphorylates and inhibits acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC), relieving the inhibition of carnitine palmitoyltransferase I (CPT-1) and dramatically increasing mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation. It stimulates glucose uptake by promoting GLUT4 translocation to the cell membrane, independent of insulin signaling. It activates PGC-1α (peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1-alpha), the master regulator of mitochondrial biogenesis, increasing mitochondrial number and function.
The exercise-mimetic effects extend to muscle fiber type transformation. AMPK/PGC-1α activation shifts gene expression toward slow-twitch (type I) oxidative fiber characteristics, increasing fatigue resistance and endurance capacity. In mouse studies, AICAR treatment for 4 weeks improved running endurance by 44% without any actual exercise training — a finding that generated enormous interest (and controversy) when published. AICAR also activates SIRT1 through increased NAD+ availability (due to enhanced fatty acid oxidation), connecting to the same longevity-associated sirtuin pathway targeted by NAD+ supplementation. However, practical use in humans is limited by the very high doses required (hundreds of milligrams to grams), poor oral bioavailability, and the extreme cost of pharmaceutical-grade AICAR. It was banned by WADA in 2011 as a metabolic modulator.
Humanin
Humanin is a 24-amino-acid peptide (MAPRGFSCLLLLTSEIDLPVKRRA) encoded within the 16S ribosomal RNA gene of the mitochondrial genome. Its discovery in 2001 was revolutionary — it was the first identified mitochondrial-derived peptide (MDP), challenging the long-held dogma that the mitochondrial genome only encodes 13 oxidative phosphorylation subunits, 22 tRNAs, and 2 rRNAs. Humanin, along with MOTS-C and the SHLP peptides discovered later, established mitochondria as endocrine organelles.
Humanin exerts cytoprotective effects through multiple mechanisms. Extracellularly, it binds to a trimeric receptor complex composed of CNTFR (ciliary neurotrophic factor receptor alpha), WSX-1 (IL-27 receptor alpha), and gp130 (the shared signaling subunit of the IL-6 receptor family). Activation of this complex triggers JAK/STAT3 signaling, which drives expression of anti-apoptotic genes (Bcl-2, Mcl-1) and cell survival programs. Intracellularly, humanin interacts directly with two pro-apoptotic proteins: it binds IGFBP-3, preventing IGFBP-3 from translocating to mitochondria and initiating apoptosis; and it binds BAX (Bcl-2-associated X protein), preventing BAX oligomerization and insertion into the outer mitochondrial membrane — the critical step in the intrinsic (mitochondrial) apoptosis pathway that releases cytochrome c and activates caspases.
Humanin also reduces cellular stress through multiple pathways. It decreases reactive oxygen species (ROS) production by optimizing mitochondrial electron transport chain function. It reduces endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress by modulating the unfolded protein response (UPR). It improves insulin sensitivity through STAT3-mediated effects on hypothalamic signaling and peripheral insulin receptor substrate phosphorylation. Circulating humanin levels decline with age (approximately 40% reduction between youth and old age) and are inversely correlated with markers of age-related disease, suggesting that humanin decline contributes to the increased cellular vulnerability and apoptosis susceptibility seen in aging. Its most potent synthetic analogue, HNG (S14G-humanin), has a glycine-for-serine substitution at position 14 that increases cytoprotective potency approximately 1,000-fold.
Risks & Safety
AICAR
Common
diarrhea, injection site pain, flushing, mild fatigue.
Serious
lactic acidosis at high doses (shifts metabolism toward anaerobic pathways), potential heart effects, low blood sugar.
Rare
severe metabolic acidosis, heart rhythm problems. Very expensive ($1000+ per treatment cycle). Limited human safety data at performance-enhancing doses.
Humanin
Common
injection site irritation, mild fatigue.
Serious
limited human safety data, may protect cancer cells from programmed death (BAX interaction), may affect IGF-1 signaling.
Rare
allergic reactions.
Full Profiles
AICAR →
A natural compound that activates your cells' energy sensor — the same pathway that turns on during exercise. Mimics the metabolic effects of endurance exercise at the cellular level, helping with fat burning, glucose uptake, and building more mitochondria. Banned by WADA as a metabolic modulator after detection in professional cycling.
Humanin →
A 24-amino-acid peptide naturally produced by mitochondria. Related to MOTS-c but works differently. Protects cells against oxidative stress, cell death, and age-related damage by interacting with proteins involved in apoptosis and IGF signaling. One of the most studied peptides in longevity research, with evidence that levels decline in aging tissues.