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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 2
2022 pubmed 7 citations

Kisspeptin-10 Rescues Cholinergic Differentiated SHSY-5Y Cells from α-Synuclein-Induced Toxicity In Vitro.

Simon. Christopher C; Soga. Tomoko T; Ahemad. Nafees N; Bhuvanendran. Saatheeyavaane S; Parhar. Ishwar I

Key Findings

  • Low concentrations of kisspeptin‑10 (0.01‑1 µM) significantly reduced toxicity caused by both wild‑type and E46K mutant alpha‑synuclein in cholinergic SH‑SY5Y cells.
  • A high concentration of kisspeptin‑10 (10 µM) decreased cell viability, indicating a potential dose‑dependent toxicity.
  • Molecular docking and 50 ns molecular dynamics simulations showed kisspeptin‑10 binds favorably to the C‑terminal region of alpha‑synuclein, with stable interactions over time.

Practical Outcomes

  • At this stage the results are purely laboratory‑based and not ready for any self‑experimentation or supplementation. The study suggests that if kisspeptin‑10 or related compounds are ever developed as drugs, they would need to be used at very low doses to avoid harming cells. For now, biohackers should view this as early‑stage science that may inform future therapeutic research, not a protocol to try today.

Summary

Scientists tested a tiny brain peptide called kisspeptin‑10 on human nerve cells that were made to produce a disease‑linked protein called alpha‑synuclein. They found that very low amounts of the peptide (0.01‑1 µM) protected the cells from damage, while a higher amount (10 µM) actually made the cells less healthy. Computer models suggest the peptide sticks to a specific part of the alpha‑synuclein protein, which might explain the protective effect.

Abstract

The neuropathological substrate of dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) is defined by the inextricable cross-seeding accretion of amyloid-β (Aβ) and α-synuclein (α-syn)-laden deposits in cholinergic neurons. The recent revelation that neuropeptide kisspeptin-10 (KP-10) is able to mitigate Aβ toxicity via an extracellular binding mechanism may provide a new horizon for innovative drug design endeavors. Considering the sequence similarities between α-syn's non-amyloid-β component (NAC) and Aβ's C-terminus, we hypothesized that KP-10 would enhance cholinergic neuronal resistance against α-syn's deleterious consequences through preferential binding. Here, human cholinergic SH-SY5Y cells were transiently transformed to upsurge the mRNA expression of α-syn while α-syn-mediated cholinergic toxicity was quantified utilizing a standardized viability-based assay. Remarkably, the E46K mutant α-syn displayed elevated α-syn mRNA levels, which subsequently induced more cellular toxicity compared with the wild-type α-syn in choline acetyltransferase (ChAT)-positive cholinergic neurons. Treatment with a high concentration of KP-10 (10 µM) further decreased cholinergic cell viability, while low concentrations of KP-10 (0.01-1 µM) substantially suppressed wild-type and E46K mutant α-syn-mediated toxicity. Correlating with the in vitro observations are approximations from in silico algorithms, which inferred that KP-10 binds favorably to the C-terminal residues of wild-type and E46K mutant α-syn with CDOCKER energy scores of -118.049 kcal/mol and -114.869 kcal/mol, respectively. Over the course of 50 ns simulation time, explicit-solvent molecular dynamics conjointly revealed that the docked complexes were relatively stable despite small-scale fluctuations upon assembly. Taken together, our findings insinuate that KP-10 may serve as a novel therapeutic scaffold with far-reaching implications for the conceptualization of α-syn-based treatments.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2022

Date

2022-05-06T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3390/ijms23095193

Citations

7

References

60