Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 2
2019 pubmed 24 citations

Intraperitoneal Treatment of Kisspeptin Suppresses Appetite and Energy Expenditure and Alters Gastrointestinal Hormones in Mice.

Dong. Tien S TS; Vu. John P JP; Oh. Suwan S; Sanford. Daniel D; Pisegna. Joseph R JR; Germano. Patrizia P

Key Findings

  • Intraperitoneal kisspeptin-10 cut food intake, meal frequency, meal size, and eating rate in mice.
  • Total energy expenditure dropped while the respiratory quotient rose, indicating a shift toward carbohydrate oxidation.
  • Plasma insulin, leptin, resistin, and HDL cholesterol levels were significantly higher after kisspeptin-10 treatment.

Practical Outcomes

  • For self‑experimenters, the data hint that kisspeptin could be a tool for appetite suppression and metabolic tweaking, but the required injection route and lack of human safety/efficacy data make it far from ready for real‑world use. Until oral or other practical formulations are tested in people, it’s mainly a proof‑of‑concept rather than a protocol to adopt.

Summary

In mice, a single injection of the peptide kisspeptin-10 lowered how much they ate, made them eat fewer and smaller meals, and reduced their overall energy use. At the same time, it raised blood levels of insulin, leptin, resistin and good cholesterol (HDL) and made their bodies burn more carbs than fat. The study suggests kisspeptin can influence appetite and metabolism, but it was done by injecting the peptide directly into the abdomen of mice, which isn’t a typical way people could use it.

Abstract

Kisspeptin is a neuropeptide that plays an integral role in the regulation of energy intake and reproduction by acting centrally on the hypothalamus-pituitary-gonadal axis. Our current study explores for the first time the effects of a pharmacological treatment of intraperitoneal kisspeptin-10 on murine feeding behavior, respirometry parameters, energy balance, and metabolic hormones. Two groups (n = 16) of age- and sex-matched C57BL/6 wild-type adult mice were individually housed in metabolic cages and intraperitoneally injected with either kisspeptin-10 (2 nmol in 200 µl of saline) (10 µM) or vehicle before the beginning of a dark-phase cycle. Microstructure of feeding and drinking behavior, respirometry gases, respiratory quotient (RQ), total energy expenditure (TEE), metabolic hormones, oral glucose tolerance, and lipid profiles were measured. Intraperitoneal treatment with kisspeptin-10 caused a significant reduction in food intake, meal frequency, meal size, and eating rate. Kisspeptin-10 significantly decreased TEE during both the dark and light phase cycles, while also increasing the RQ during the dark-phase cycle. In addition, mice injected with kisspeptin-10 had significantly higher plasma levels of insulin (343.8 pg/ml vs. 106.4 pg/ml; p = 0.005), leptin (855.5 pg/ml vs. 173.1 pg/ml; p = 0.02), resistin (9411.1 pg/ml vs. 4116.5 pg/ml; p = 0.001), and HDL (147.6 mg/dl vs 97.1 mg/dl; p = 0.04). A pharmacological dose of kisspeptin-10 significantly altered metabolism by suppressing food intake, meal size, eating rate, and TEE while increasing the RQ. These changes were linked to increased levels of insulin, leptin, resistin, and HDL. The current results suggest that a peripheral kisspeptin treatment could alter metabolism and energy homeostasis by suppressing appetite, food intake, and fat accumulation.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2019

Date

2019-11-15T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1007/s10620-019-05950-7

Citations

24

References

42