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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 2
2020 pubmed 11 citations

Associations of serum kisspeptin levels with metabolic and reproductive parameters in men.

Sitticharoon. Chantacha C; Mutirangura. Pornthira P; Chinachoti. Thitima T; Iamaroon. Arissara A; Triyasunant. Namtip N; Churintaraphan. Malika M; Keadkraichaiwat. Issarawan I; Maikaew. Pailin P; Sririwichitchai. Rungnapa R

Key Findings

  • Serum kisspeptin is higher in obese men compared to normal‑weight and overweight men
  • Blood kisspeptin levels positively correlate with BMI, insulin, HOMA‑IR and leptin, and negatively with LH
  • Kisspeptin was undetectable in cerebrospinal fluid, indicating peripheral rather than central activity

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, kisspeptin could serve as a potential blood biomarker for obesity‑related metabolic dysfunction, but there’s no evidence yet that taking kisspeptin will improve metabolism. At this stage, the finding is mainly informative and suggests more research before any supplementation or protocol changes.

Summary

The study found that men with higher body weight and obesity have higher levels of kisspeptin in their blood, and these levels go up together with insulin, insulin resistance, and leptin, while they go down with a hormone called LH. No kisspeptin was detected in the spinal fluid. This suggests kisspein might play a role in how the body handles metabolism, especially in overweight people.

Abstract

Central kisspeptin action is well known in reproductive regulation; however, its peripheral action is not well understood. This study aimed to 1) compare serum or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) kisspeptin levels between different body mass index (BMI) groups 2) compare the levels of kisspeptin between serum and CSF, and 3) determine correlations between serum or CSF kisspeptin levels with clinical, metabolic, and reproductive parameters. There were 40 male subjects undergoing operations with lumbar puncture anesthesia. Subgroup analysis was performed to compare between the normal (n = 12), overweight (n = 10), and obese groups (n = 17). One lean subject was recruited for correlation analysis. Serum kisspeptin levels were significantly higher in the obese group when compared to the normal weight and overweight groups even after adjusting for age or diastolic blood pressure (DBP) (p < 0.05 all). Serum leptin levels were significantly higher in the obese group when compared to the normal weight and overweight groups (p < 0.05 all). CSF kisspeptin levels were below the minimum detectable concentration for the assay (<0.06 ng/mL). Serum kisspeptin was positively correlated with body weight, BMI, plasma insulin, the homeostatic model assessment for insulin resistance (HOMA-IR), and serum leptin but was negatively correlated with plasma LH (p < 0.05 all). In conclusion, serum kisspeptin was related to obesity, leptin, insulin, and insulin resistance, while CSF kisspeptin was below the limits of detection. Thus, peripheral kisspeptin might have a role in metabolic regulation.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2020

Date

2020-10-29T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.peptides.2020.170433

Citations

11

References

50