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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 2
2017 pubmed 18 citations

Cross-Linking Furan-Modified Kisspeptin-10 to the KISS Receptor.

Vannecke. Willem W; Ampe. Christophe C; Van Troys. Marleen M; Beltramo. Massimiliano M; Madder. Annemieke A

Key Findings

  • Furan-modified kisspein-10 can covalently bind to the KISS1R receptor in live cells.
  • The cross‑linking occurs spontaneously via endogenous ROS, without needing external chemicals or UV light.
  • The method works across multiple cell lines and shows no toxicity, offering a precise way to study receptor‑ligand interactions.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this research mainly provides a new lab technique rather than a direct health protocol. It suggests that future kisspeptin‑based interventions could be designed to be safer, but there are no immediate dosage or usage recommendations for personal use.

Summary

Scientists showed that a specially tweaked version of the kisspeptin-10 peptide can stick itself to its natural receptor on cell surfaces without using harmful UV light. The reaction happens inside living cells thanks to natural reactive oxygen species, making the process safe and efficient.

Abstract

Chemical cross-linking is well-established for investigating protein-protein interactions. Traditionally, photo cross-linking is used but is associated with problems of selectivity and UV toxicity in a biological context. We here describe, with live cells and under normal growth conditions, selective cross-linking of a furan-modified peptide ligand to its membrane-presented receptor with zero toxicity, high efficiency, and spatio-specificity. Furan-modified kisspeptin-10 is covalently coupled to its glycosylated membrane receptor, GPR54(KISS1R). This newly expands the applicability of furan-mediated cross-linking not only to protein-protein cross-linking but also to cross-linking in situ. Moreover, in our earlier reports on nucleic acid interstrand cross-linking, furan activation required external triggers of oxidation (via addition of N-bromo succinimide or singlet oxygen). In contrast, we here show, for multiple cell lines, the spontaneous endogenous oxidation of the furan moiety with concurrent selective cross-link formation. We propose that reactive oxygen species produced by NADPH oxidase (NOX) enzymes form the cellular source establishing furan oxidation.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2017

Date

2017-07-17T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1021/acschembio.7b00396

Citations

18

References

56