Characterization of Kisspeptin Neurons in the Human Rostral Hypothalamus.
Rumpler. Éva É; Skrapits. Katalin K; Takács. Szabolcs S; Göcz. Balázs B; Trinh. Sarolta H SH; Rácz. Gergely G; Matolcsy. András A; Kozma. Zsolt Z; Ciofi. Philippe P; Dhillo. Waljit S WS; Hrabovszky. Erik E
Key Findings
- Kisspeptin neurons exist in the rostral hypothalamus of humans and are positively regulated by estrogen.
- Cell numbers are similar in young adult men and women, but decrease after menopause.
- Human rostral kisspeptin neurons lack several neurochemical markers found in rodent counterparts.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this study mainly adds basic knowledge about how estrogen may affect brain circuits linked to reproductive hormones. It doesn’t provide new dosing guidelines or direct interventions, but suggests that estrogen‑based strategies could influence kisspeptin pathways, which might be relevant for hormone‑related health experiments.
Summary
Researchers mapped kisspeptin‑producing neurons in the front part of the human hypothalamus and found they are influenced by estrogen, similar to what’s seen in animals. Men and young women have about the same number of these cells, but the count drops after menopause. These human cells are also chemically different from the ones studied in rodents.
Abstract
Kisspeptin (KP) neurons in the rostral periventricular region of the 3rd ventricle (RP3V) of female rodents mediate positive estrogen feedback to gonadotropin-releasing hormone neurons and, thus, play a fundamental role in the mid-cycle luteinizing hormone (LH) surge. The RP3V is sexually dimorphic, and male rodents with lower KP cell numbers are unable to mount estrogen-induced LH surges. To find and characterize the homologous KP neurons in the human brain, we studied formalin-fixed post-mortem hypothalami. Immunohistochemical techniques were used. The distribution of KP neurons in the rostral hypothalamus overlapped with distinct subdivisions of the paraventricular nucleus. The cell numbers decreased after menopause, indicating that estrogens positively regulate KP gene expression in the rostral hypothalamus in humans, similarly to several other species. Young adult women and men had similar cell numbers, as opposed to rodents reported to have more KP neurons in the RP3V of females. Human KP neurons differed from the homologous rodent cells as well, in that they were devoid of enkephalins, galanin and tyrosine hydroxylase. Further, they did not contain known KP neuron markers of the human infundibular nucleus, neurokinin B, substance P and cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcript, while they received afferent input from these KP neurons. The identification and positive estrogenic regulation of KP neurons in the human rostral hypothalamus challenge the long-held view that positive estrogen feedback may be restricted to the mediobasal part of the hypothalamus in primates and point to the need of further anatomical, molecular and functional studies of rostral hypothalamic KP neurons.
Study Information
pubmed
2020
2020-04-16T00:00:00.000Z
10.1159/000507891
17
67