Kisspeptin-10 binding to Gpr54 in osteoclasts prevents bone loss by activating Dusp18-mediated dephosphorylation of Src.
Li. Zhenxi Z; Yang. Xinghai X; Fu. Ruifeng R; Wu. Zhipeng Z; Xu. Shengzhao S; Jiao. Jian J; Qian. Ming M; Zhang. Long L; Wu. Chunbiao C; Xie. Tianying T; Yao. Jiqiang J; Wu. Zhixiang Z; Li. Wenjun W; Ma. Guoli G; You. Yu Y; Chen. Yihua Y; Zhang. Han-Kun HK; Cheng. Yiyun Y; Tang. Xiaolong X; Wu. Pengfei P; Lian. Gewei G; Wei. Haifeng H; Zhao. Jian J; Xu. Jianrong J; Ai. Lianzhong L; Siwko. Stefan S; Wang. Yue Y; Ding. Jin J; Song. Gaojie G; Luo. Jian J; Liu. Mingyao M; Xiao. Jianru J
Key Findings
- Kisspeptin-10 activates GPR54 in osteoclasts, leading to increased DUSP18 which dephosphorylates (turns off) Src kinase.
- Mice lacking Kiss1, Gpr54, or Dusp18 show over‑active osteoclasts and bone loss, confirming the pathway’s importance.
- Administering Kp-10 in vivo reduced bone loss by suppressing osteoclast activity, suggesting therapeutic potential.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers focused on longevity and bone health, this study highlights a promising molecular target (Kp-10/GPR54) that could one day be leveraged to maintain bone density. However, the work is still at the animal‑model stage, with no human dosing or safety data, so it’s not yet ready for direct supplementation or protocol changes.
Summary
Researchers found that the peptide kisspeptin-10 (Kp-10) can bind to a receptor called GPR54 on bone‑breaking cells (osteoclasts) and trigger a chain reaction that turns off a key enzyme (Src) that makes these cells over‑active. In mice lacking the receptor or related proteins, bones got weaker, but giving Kp-10 stopped the bone loss. This points to a new way to protect bone health by targeting the Kp-10/GPR54 pathway.
Abstract
Osteoclasts are over-activated as we age, which results in bone loss. Src deficiency in mice leads to severe osteopetrosis due to a functional defect in osteoclasts, indicating that Src function is essential in osteoclasts. G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are the targets for ∼35% of approved drugs but it is still unclear how GPCRs regulate Src kinase activity. Here, we reveal that GPR54 activation by its natural ligand Kisspeptin-10 (Kp-10) causes Dusp18 to dephosphorylate Src at Tyr 416. Mechanistically, Gpr54 recruits both active Src and the Dusp18 phosphatase at its proline/arginine-rich motif in its C terminus. We show that Kp-10 binding to Gpr54 leads to the up-regulation of Dusp18. Kiss1, Gpr54 and Dusp18 knockout mice all exhibit osteoclast hyperactivation and bone loss, and Kp-10 abrogated bone loss by suppressing osteoclast activity in vivo. Therefore, Kp-10/Gpr54 is a promising therapeutic target to abrogate bone resorption by Dusp18-mediated Src dephosphorylation.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-02-12T00:00:00.000Z
10.1038/s41467-024-44852-9
14
47