Association of Polymorphisms in the Kisspeptin/GPR54 Pathway Genes With Risk of Early Puberty in Chinese Girls.
Li. Di D; Wu. Yu Y; Cheng. Jinquan J; Liu. Liegang L; Li. Xiaoheng X; Chen. Dingyan D; Huang. Suli S; Wen. Ying Y; Ke. Yuebin Y; Yao. Yao Y; Su. Zhe Z; Zhou. Li L
Key Findings
- Variant rs5780218 is linked to a higher risk of central precocious puberty (about 1.6‑2.1 times higher odds).
- Variant rs708910 also raises the risk of early puberty (about 2.8 times higher odds in a recessive model).
- Variant rs932491 appears to lower the risk of early and fast puberty (about 0.3 times the odds).
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers and self‑directed health optimizers, this study offers no direct, actionable information. It does not suggest any dosing, supplementation, or lifestyle changes involving kisspeptin‑10. The findings are mainly of interest to genetic researchers and clinicians focusing on puberty disorders.
Summary
The study looked at genetic variations in the kisspeptin signaling pathway and how they relate to early puberty in Chinese girls. It found that certain gene changes increase the chance of early puberty, while another change may protect against it. The research does not provide any guidance on using kisspeptin‑10 or related compounds for health, performance, or longevity.
Abstract
This case control study was designed to investigate the association between mutation of 10 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) loci (rs1132506, rs5780218, rs192636495, rs4889, rs184749, rs12985070, rs708910, rs932491, rs8074995, and rs2306877) in all 5 genes (KISS1, GPR54, PLCB1, PRKCA, and ITPR1) in the kisspeptin/GPR54 pathway and the risk of early puberty in Chinese Han girls. A total of 314 pairs of early puberty girls on their first visit to hospital and age-matched controls (± 3 months) were recruited. The genotypes of each SNP were determined and the effect of loci variation on early puberty was investigated. rs5780218 was significantly associated with early puberty in additive, dominant, and recessive models of inheritance after adjusting for confounding factors (Pr < .05). After stratification, rs5780218 variation (odds ratio [OR], 1.650, 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.155-2.355 in additive models and OR, 2.116; 95% CI, 1.187-3.770 in recessive models) increased the risk of central precocious puberty (CPP); mutation in rs708910 (OR, 2.768; 95% CI, 1.305-5.872 in recessive model) had a positive association with the risk of CPP; and rs932491 variation was negatively associated with early and fast puberty (EFP) (OR, 0.309; 95% CI, 0.144-0.661 in additive models and OR, 0.317; 95% CI, 0.141-0.713 in dominant models). Our study suggests that mutation in rs5780218 and rs708910 increases the risk of CPP. rs932491 variation may have a protective effect on the risk of EFP. Further studies in larger populations or with people from different regions are needed to verify our findings.
Study Information
pubmed
2020
2020-04-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1210/clinem/dgz229
20
37