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Kisspeptin-10

KP-10, Metastin (45-54), Kisspeptin-10 (human), KiSS-1

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 2
2024 pubmed 4 citations

The evolutionary conserved miR-137/325 tandem mediates obesity-induced hypogonadism and metabolic comorbidities by repressing hypothalamic kisspeptin.

Avendaño. María S MS; Perdices-Lopez. Cecilia C; Guerrero-Ruiz. Yolanda Y; Ruiz-Pino. Francisco F; Rodriguez-Sanchez. Ana B AB; Sanchez-Tapia. María J MJ; Sobrino. Verónica V; Pineda. Rafael R; Barroso. Alexia A; Correa-Sáez. Alejandro A; Lara-Chica. Maribel M; Fernandez-Garcia. José C JC; García-Redondo. Ana B AB; Hernanz. Raquel R; Ruiz-Cruz. Miguel M; Garcia-Galiano. David D; Pitteloud. Nelly N; Calzado. Marco A MA; Briones. Ana M AM; Vázquez. María J MJ; Tena-Sempere. Manuel M

Key Findings

  • Obesity raises miR‑137/325 levels in the hypothalamus, which suppresses KISS1 (kisspeptin) expression.
  • Genetically increasing miR‑137 in kisspeptin neurons reproduces hypogonadism and metabolic problems in lean mice.
  • Using target‑site blockers to inhibit miR‑137/325 in obese rats restores kisspeptin, normalizes testosterone, and improves glucose tolerance, insulin resistance, and inflammatory markers, outperforming direct kisspeptin or testosterone treatment.

Practical Outcomes

  • At present there’s no DIY way to block miR‑137/325, so the findings are not directly actionable for self‑experimentation. However, the study highlights kisspeptin’s central role in obesity‑related hormone loss, suggesting that future therapies might target these micro‑RNAs. For now, biohackers can focus on established lifestyle strategies (weight loss, exercise, sleep, intermittent fasting) that naturally support kisspeptin and testosterone production.

Summary

In obese male rats, two tiny RNA molecules (miR‑137 and miR‑325) become more abundant and shut down the brain's kisspeptin signal, leading to low testosterone and worse metabolism. Blocking these RNAs restores kisspeptin, fixes hormone levels, and improves glucose control and inflammation—better than giving extra kisspeptin or testosterone. The work shows a new molecular target, but it’s still early‑stage animal research.

Abstract

Obesity-induced hypogonadism (OIH) is a prevalent, but often neglected condition in men, which aggravates the metabolic complications of overweight. While hypothalamic suppression of Kiss1-encoded kisspeptin has been suggested to contribute to OIH, the molecular mechanisms for such repression in obesity, and the therapeutic implications thereof, remain unknown. A combination of bioinformatic, expression and functional analyses was implemented, assessing the role of the evolutionary-conserved miRNAs, miR-137 and miR-325, in mediating obesity-induced suppression of hypothalamic kisspeptin, as putative mechanism of central hypogonadism and metabolic comorbidities. The implications of such miR-137/325-kisspeptin interplay for therapeutic intervention in obesity were also explored using preclinical OIH models. MiR-137/325 repressed human KISS1 3'-UTR in-vitro and inhibited hypothalamic kisspeptin content in male rats, while miR-137/325 expression was up-regulated, and Kiss1/kisspeptin decreased, in the medio-basal hypothalamus of obese rats. Selective over-expression of miR-137 in Kiss1 neurons reduced Kiss1/ kisspeptin and partially replicated reproductive and metabolic alterations of OIH in lean mice. Conversely, interference of the repressive actions of miR-137/325 selectively on Kiss1 3'-UTR in vivo, using target-site blockers (TSB), enhanced kisspeptin content and reversed central hypogonadism in obese rats, together with improvement of glucose intolerance, insulin resistance and cardiovascular and inflammatory markers, despite persistent exposure to obesogenic diet. Reversal of OIH by TSB miR-137/325 was more effective than chronic kisspeptin or testosterone treatments in obese rats. Our data disclose that the miR-137/325-Kisspeptin repressive interaction is a major player in the pathogenesis of obesity-induced hypogonadism and a putative druggable target for improved management of this condition and its metabolic comorbidities in men suffering obesity. Up to half of the men suffering obesity display also central hypogonadism, an often neglected complication of overweight that can aggravate the clinical course of obesity and its complications. The mechanisms for such obesity-induced hypogonadism remain poorly defined. We show here that the evolutionary conserved miR137/miR325 tandem centrally mediates obesity-induced hypogonadism via repression of the reproductive-stimulatory signal, kisspeptin; this may represent an amenable druggable target for improved management of hypogonadism and other metabolic complications of obesity.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2024

Date

2024-05-08T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.metabol.2024.155932

Citations

4

References

58