MKRN3 inhibits the reproductive axis through actions in kisspeptin-expressing neurons.
Abreu. Ana Paula AP; Toro. Carlos A CA; Song. Yong Bhum YB; Navarro. Victor M VM; Bosch. Martha A MA; Eren. Aysegul A; Liang. Joy N JN; Carroll. Rona S RS; Latronico. Ana Claudia AC; Rønnekleiv. Oline K OK; Aylwin. Carlos F CF; Lomniczi. Alejandro A; Ojeda. Sergio S; Kaiser. Ursula B UB
Key Findings
- MKRN3 is abundant in the hypothalamus of young animals and drops as puberty approaches.
- MKRN3 is present in kisspeptin‑producing (Kiss1) neurons and suppresses the genes KISS1 and TAC3 that stimulate GnRH release.
- The protein’s ubiquitin‑ligase activity is needed for this suppression, and disease‑linked mutations impair both the activity and gene repression.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the research doesn’t offer a direct protocol or supplement to use. It mainly deepens understanding of how puberty timing is controlled, which could inform future anti‑puberty or fertility interventions, but there are no immediate actionable steps for longevity or performance optimization.
Summary
The study shows that a protein called MKRN3 acts like a brake on puberty by turning down the activity of kisspeptin and another hormone signal in the brain. When MKRN3 levels drop, the brake is released and puberty can start. Mutations that weaken MKRN3’s ability to tag other proteins also reduce this braking effect.
Abstract
The identification of loss-of-function mutations in MKRN3 in patients with central precocious puberty in association with the decrease in MKRN3 expression in the medial basal hypothalamus of mice before the initiation of reproductive maturation suggests that MKRN3 is acting as a brake on gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) secretion during childhood. In the current study, we investigated the mechanism by which MKRN3 prevents premature manifestation of the pubertal process. We showed that, as in mice, MKRN3 expression is high in the hypothalamus of rats and nonhuman primates early in life, decreases as puberty approaches, and is independent of sex steroid hormones. We demonstrated that Mkrn3 is expressed in Kiss1 neurons of the mouse hypothalamic arcuate nucleus and that MKRN3 repressed promoter activity of human KISS1 and TAC3, 2 key stimulators of GnRH secretion. We further showed that MKRN3 has ubiquitinase activity, that this activity is reduced by MKRN3 mutations affecting the RING finger domain, and that these mutations compromised the ability of MKRN3 to repress KISS1 and TAC3 promoter activity. These results indicate that MKRN3 acts to prevent puberty initiation, at least in part, by repressing KISS1 and TAC3 transcription and that this action may involve an MKRN3-directed ubiquitination-mediated mechanism.
Study Information
pubmed
2020
2020-08-03T00:00:00.000Z
10.1172/jci136564