Gametogenic and steroidogenic action of kisspeptin-10 in the Asian catfish, Clarias batrachus: Putative underlying mechanistic cascade.
Singh. Ankur A; Lal. Bechan B; Parkash. Jyoti J; Millar. Robert P RP
Key Findings
- Kisspeptin‑10 caused early and rapid gametogenesis in both male and female catfish.
- Steroid levels and the activity of steroid‑making enzymes (3β‑HSD, 17β‑HSD, StAR) increased after treatment.
- MAPK pathway components (pERK1/2, ERK1/2) were up‑regulated in gonadal tissue, suggesting a signaling mechanism.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the work mainly adds basic knowledge about kisspeptin’s role in fish reproduction and steroid production. It does not provide a clear, safe protocol or dosage for humans, nor does it directly relate to longevity, metabolic health, or performance enhancement.
Summary
The study shows that giving kisspeptin‑10 to a type of catfish jump‑starts the development of eggs and sperm and boosts the production of sex steroids in the fish's gonads. The researchers think kisspeptin works directly in the gonads, not just through the brain, by turning on enzymes that make steroids and activating MAPK signaling.
Abstract
Unlike mammals, two kisspeptins genes encoding, kiss1 and kiss2 are detected in fishes with highly varied and contradictory difference in their reproductive activities. The present study was undertaken to examine the direct action of kisspeptin-10 and its role in gonadal activities in the gonadally quiescent Asian catfish using native mammalian kisspeptin decapeptide (KP-10) involving in vivo and in vitro approaches. The in vivo KP-10 treatment caused precocious onset of gametogenesis and its rapid progression, as was evident from the appearance of advanced stages of ovarian follicles in ovary, and advanced germ cells (spermatocytes/ spermatids) in the testis of the treated Clarias batrachus in comparison to the control gonads. It also elevated the steroid levels in gonads of the catfish in vivo and in vitro conditions. Simultaneously, it increased the expressions of key steroidogenic enzymes like 3β-HSD, 17β-HSD, and StAR protein, responsible for transfer of cholesterol from outer to inner membrane of the mitochondria of steroidogenic cells. Concurrently, it augmented the activities of 3β-HSD and 17β-HSD in the ovarian explants. The expressions of MAPK component (pERK1/2 and ERK1/2) were also up-regulated by KP-10 in gonadal explants. Thus, the data suggest that kisspeptin-10 stimulates gametogenesis by enhancing gonadal steroid production. The study also describes the putative mechanistic cascade of steroidogenic actions of kisspeptin-10 in the catfish so much so in teleost fish. The study also suggests that, kisspeptin may act locally to regulate gonadal activities in an autocrine/paracine manner, independent of known extra-gonadal factors in the catfish.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-06-28T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.cbpb.2021.110642
11