AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) signaling in GnRH neurons links energy status and reproduction.
Franssen. D D; Barroso. A A; Ruiz-Pino. F F; Vázquez. M J MJ; García-Galiano. D D; Castellano. J M JM; Onieva. R R; Ruiz-Cruz. M M; Poutanen. M M; Gaytán. F F; Diéguez. C C; Pinilla. L L; Lopez. M M; Roa. J J; Tena-Sempere. M M
Key Findings
- Over 95% of GnRH neurons show active (phosphorylated) AMPK, indicating they sense cellular energy status.
- Female mice lacking AMPK in GnRH neurons (GAMKO) reach puberty sooner and have heightened LH responses to kisspeptin‑10; males do not show this effect.
- During fasting, GAMKO females maintain higher LH pulsatility than normal females, but this advantage disappears after ovariectomy.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the study suggests that low‑energy states (e.g., fasting) may blunt the effectiveness of kisspeptin‑based protocols aimed at boosting reproductive hormones. Timing kisspeptin‑10 administration when energy stores are sufficient could improve LH response, especially in women. However, the findings are from a specific mouse genetic model, so direct human application remains speculative.
Summary
In mice, the energy‑sensing enzyme AMPK in GnRH neurons normally dampens the reproductive hormone response when the body is low on fuel. Removing AMPK from these neurons makes female mice hit puberty earlier and react more strongly to kisspeptin‑10, a peptide that triggers LH release. The effect disappears if the ovaries are removed, showing the link depends on intact female reproductive organs.
Abstract
Reproduction is tightly coupled to body energy and metabolic status. GnRH neurons, master elements and final output pathway for the brain control of reproduction, directly or indirectly receive and integrate multiple metabolic cues to regulate reproductive function. Yet, the molecular underpinnings of such phenomenon remain largely unfolded. AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), the fundamental cellular sensor that becomes activated in conditions of energy deficit, has been recently shown to participate in the control of Kiss1 neurons, essential gatekeepers of the reproductive axis, by driving an inhibitory valence in situations of energy scarcity at puberty. However, the contribution of AMPK signaling specifically in GnRH neurons to the metabolic control of reproduction remains unknown. Double immunohistochemistry (IHC) was applied to evaluate expression of active (phosphorylated) AMPK in GnRH neurons and a novel mouse line, named GAMKO, with conditional ablation of the AMPK α1 subunit in GnRH neurons, was generated. GAMKO mice of both sexes were subjected to reproductive characterization, with attention to puberty and gonadotropic responses to kisspeptin and metabolic stress. A vast majority (>95%) of GnRH neurons co-expressed pAMPK. Female (but not male) GAMKO mice displayed earlier puberty onset and exaggerated LH (as surrogate marker of GnRH) responses to kisspeptin-10 at the prepubertal age. In adulthood, GAMKO females retained increased LH responsiveness to kisspeptin and showed partial resilience to the inhibitory effects of conditions of negative energy balance on the gonadotropic axis. The modulatory role of AMPK in GnRH neurons required preserved ovarian function, since the differences in LH pulsatility detected between GAMKO and control mice subjected to fasting were abolished in ovariectomized animals. Altogether, our data document a sex-biased, physiological role of AMPK signaling in GnRH neurons, as molecular conduit of the inhibitory actions of conditions of energy deficit on the female reproductive axis.
Study Information
pubmed
2020
2020-12-04T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.metabol.2020.154460
28
54