Distribution of the kisspeptin system and its relation with gonadotropin-releasing hormone in the hypothalamus.
Dorfman. Verónica Berta VB
Key Findings
- Kisspeptin is a key regulator of the reproductive hormone GnRH.
- The peptide is present in the hypothalamus and many reproductive and non‑reproductive tissues across mammals, fish, and amphibians (but not birds).
- Studying kisspeptin in non‑standard lab animals helps reveal its role in different reproductive strategies.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the study offers little direct guidance on dosing or protocols. It mainly confirms that kisspeptin’s primary function is reproductive hormone regulation, so any experimental use should focus on that axis and consider species‑specific differences.
Summary
The paper explains where kisspeptin (a peptide that helps start puberty and control reproductive hormones) is found in the brain and other tissues of various animals, and how it interacts with the hormone that triggers reproductive signals. It’s mostly basic science about animal biology, not about using kisspeptin in humans.
Abstract
Kisspeptin (KISS1), originally catalogued as metastin because of its capacity as a metastasis suppressor in human melanoma and breast cancer, is now recognized as the major puberty gatekeeper and gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) neuroendocrine system modulator. It is a member of the family of RFamide-related peptides that also includes the neuropeptide FF group, the gonadotropin-inhibitory hormone, the prolactin-releasing peptide, and the 26RFa peptides. The KISS1 precursor peptide is processed into a family of peptides known as kisspeptins. Its expression has been described in the hypothalamus as well as in the whole reproductive axis and several extra reproductive tissues of mammals as well as fish and amphibians, but not in birds. KISS1 plays an essential role as a regulator of the reproductive axis by inducing the synthesis and release of GnRH, acting through specific receptors. The study of the kisspeptin system and its relation with reproduction in wild and non-classical laboratory species is extremely useful to understand and become aware of the role of KISS1 in the wide variety of possible different reproductive strategies. In this chapter, KISS1 involvement in non-classical laboratory rodents, fishes, and birds is discussed.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-06-25T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/bs.vh.2024.06.004