Effect of kisspeptin-10, LH and hCG on serum testosterone concentrations in stallions, donkeys and mules.
Akhtar. Rana Waseem RW; Shah. Syed Aftab Hussain SAH; Qureshi. Irfan Zia IZ
Key Findings
- KP-10 injection increased serum testosterone in stallions, donkeys and mules compared to saline control.
- The timing of the testosterone rise varied: stallions showed a significant increase at 240 min, donkeys at 120‑240 min, and mules at 120‑240 min after KP-10 administration.
- KP-10’s effect was comparable to traditional gonadotropins (hCG and LH), suggesting it can stimulate the reproductive axis.
Practical Outcomes
- For human‑focused biohackers, the study hints that KP-10 might boost testosterone, but the data are limited to equine species, so direct dosing protocols for people are not established. It may encourage further research on KP-10 as a potential testosterone‑raising agent, but more human‑specific trials are needed before practical use.
Summary
Giving kisspeptin-10 (KP-10) to male horses, donkeys and mules raised their blood testosterone levels, similar to the effects of hCG and LH. The rise was seen a few hours after injection, showing KP-10 can act like a natural trigger for testosterone production in these animals.
Abstract
This study was conducted to determine the response of serum testosterone (T) in male equines (stallions, donkeys and mules) after administering intravenous doses of kisspeptin-10 (KP-10), human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) and luteinizing hormone (LH) and saline as a control. The animals were divided into four groups of three each: Group I, 3 ml of 0.95% saline; Group II, 50 μg KP-10; Group III, 2500 IU hCG and group IV, 400 μg LH. The administration of KP-10 and hCG to stallions resulted in a significant increase in serum T concentration at 240 min; whereas it was significantly higher at 30, 60, 120, and 240 min with LH treatment as compared to pre-dose concentrations. Both KP-10 and hCG significantly elevated the T concentrations in donkeys at 120 and 240 min, respectively; whereas it was significantly higher at 60, 120, and 240 min with LH treatment as compared to pre-dose concentration. Both KP-10 and LH elevated T in donkeys at 240 min as compared to the control and hCG concentrations. After 120 and 240 min, T concentrations in mules were higher (p < 0.05) with administration of KP-10, hCG and LH as compared to the control. In conclusion, the administration of KP-10, hCG and LH elevate the serum T concentration in normal male equines. It is suggested that KP-10 may be useful in situations where an increase in T is desired. Further work is required to determine the effect of KP-10 on T in male equids with reproductive abnormalities before it can be used in clinical situations.
Study Information
pubmed
2017
2017-07-21T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.theriogenology.2017.07.027
6
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