The roles of kisspeptin and neurokinin B in GnRH pulse generation in humans, and their potential clinical application.
Anderson. Richard A RA; Millar. Robert P RP
Key Findings
- Continuous, receptor‑saturating infusion of kisspeptin‑10 increases LH (GnRH) pulse frequency in healthy and hypogonadal men and women.
- The effect is seen even in people with mutations in the neurokinin B pathway and in women with PCOS treated with NK3R antagonists.
- No desensitization occurs during a 22‑hour continuous kisspeptin‑10 infusion.
- Pulsatile secretion of kisspeptin itself is not required for generating LH pulses in humans.
Practical Outcomes
- For DIY health enthusiasts, the data suggest kisspeptin can acutely boost the reproductive hormone axis without losing effect over a day, but delivering it requires IV infusion at high concentrations—something not feasible for most self‑experiments. It may inform future development of more user‑friendly kisspeptin analogs or dosing strategies for hormone optimization, but the current protocol isn’t directly actionable for home use.
Summary
The study shows that giving people a steady, high‑dose infusion of kisspeptin‑10 for about a day makes the brain release more frequent LH pulses (the hormone that tells the gonads to make sex hormones). This works in both men and women, even those with hormone problems, and the response doesn’t wear off after many hours.
Abstract
The delivery of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) in a pulsatile mode to the gonadotropes has long been known to be essential for normal reproductive function. There have been numerous studies aimed at dissecting out the mechanisms underlying GnRH pulse generation. The discovery of kisspeptin as an upstream regulator of GnRH attracted the possibility that pulsatile kisspeptin governed the pulsatile secretion of GnRH. Subsequent studies have shown the importance of the neurokinin B (NKB) system in modulating kisspeptin secretion and this GnRH. A number of studies in laboratory rodents have supported this notion. By contrast, we present data from clinical studies in men and women, in a range of contexts, showing that continuous infusion of kisspeptin 10 at receptor-saturating levels gives rise to an increase in luteinizing hormone (LH) (GnRH) pulse frequency. This has been demonstrated in normal healthy and hypogonadal men, in normal women during the mid-cycle LH surge, in men and women with mutations in the genes encoding NKB or its receptor, neurokinin 3 receptor (NK3R), in women with polycystic ovary syndrome treated with NK3R antagonist, and in women treated with NK3R antagonist during the LH surge. These finds indicate that pulsatile secretion and action of kisspeptin on GnRH neurons is not required for the generation of LH (GnRH) pulses in humans. We also report that there is an absence of desensitization in humans exposed to continuous infusion of kisspeptin-10 at receptor-saturating concentrations over 22 h and briefly review GnRH, kisspeptin and NKB analogs and their clinical application.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-12-28T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/jne.13081
16
60