Intraperitoneal administration of kisspeptin-10 modulates follicle maturation, gonadal steroids, calcium and metabolites in Sterlet sturgeon, Acipenser ruthenus.
Roosta. Zahra Z; Unniappan. Suraj S; Uju. Chinelo C; Rahmati. Mehdi M; Falahatkar. Bahram B
Key Findings
- Kisspeptin‑10 altered plasma estradiol levels and increased vitellogenin in the fish.
- Prolonged exposure raised calcium, glucose, lipids, and cholesterol in the bloodstream.
- Testosterone and overall body weight were not changed by the treatment.
Practical Outcomes
- These results are specific to a fish species and don’t give a clear, safe protocol for humans. While they hint that kisspeptin may influence metabolism and reproductive hormones, more human‑focused research is needed before any biohacker can apply this information.
Summary
Giving kisspeptin‑10 to Sterlet sturgeon changed some hormone and metabolism numbers – it raised estradiol, vitellogenin, calcium, glucose and blood fats, but didn’t affect testosterone or body weight. The peptide also helped more eggs mature in the fish.
Abstract
Kisspeptin is a multifunctional neurohormone, primarily involved in the regulation of reproduction. We tested whether peripheral administration of kisspeptin10 (KP-10) via intraperitoneal injection or slow release affects reproductive hormones and metabolites in Sterlet sturgeon (Acipenser ruthenus). Plasma and mucus 17β-estradiol (E<sub>2</sub>), and testosterone (T), plasma and follicular vitellogenin (VTG) and calcium (Ca) as well as glucose and lipids were determined. Mature Sterlet sturgeon were grouped into six groups: saline i.p injection (control), human kisspeptin (hKP-10) i.p injection; acipenser kisspeptin (aKP-10) i.p injection; hKP-10 (slow release); aKP-10 (slow-release) and no treatment control. No effect for KP-10 on sturgeon body weight was found after 4 weeks of treatment. Multivariate analysis revealed a significant disparity in plasma E<sub>2</sub> levels. It was significantly different between groups (time, P = 0.0022). E<sub>2</sub> in epithelia mucosa showed significant difference between and within groups in the acute group (time, P = 0.0252; treatment, P = 0.0423; time × treatment, P = 0.0429). T levels were unaffected by treatments (P > 0.05). The presence of synthetic aKP-10 led to an elevation in oocyte and plasma VTG levels (P < 0.05). Prolonged exposure to this peptide resulted in an increase in plasma calcium levels. Simultaneously, there was an augmentation in the number of mature follicles. Regardless of the duration of exposure, aKP-10 significantly elevated plasma glucose levels in Sterlet (P < 0.0). Additionally, KP-10 led to an increase in plasma lipids and cholesterol in Sterlet. Overall, our data support an involvement for KP-10 in the regulation of gonadal steroid hormones, oocyte maturation and metabolite levels in sturgeon, suggesting a positive role for this peptide in the reproductive physiology of this species.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-02-23T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.cbpa.2024.111609
2
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