A role for placental kisspeptin in β cell adaptation to pregnancy.
Bowe. James E JE; Hill. Thomas G TG; Hunt. Katharine F KF; Smith. Lorna If LI; Simpson. Sian Js SJ; Amiel. Stephanie A SA; Jones. Peter M PM
Key Findings
- Placental kisspeptin boosts insulin release from pancreatic beta cells during pregnancy.
- Blocking kisspeptin in pregnant mice leads to glucose intolerance due to reduced insulin secretion.
- In pregnant humans, lower circulating kisspeptin is associated with gestational diabetes.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this research suggests kisspein‑10 could be explored as a way to support insulin secretion, especially in contexts of insulin resistance. However, the findings are specific to pregnancy and gestational diabetes, so direct supplementation protocols for general metabolic health are not yet established. More human safety and dosing data would be needed before practical use.
Summary
The study shows that kisspeptin, a hormone released by the placenta, helps the pancreas make more insulin during pregnancy. Blocking kisspeptin in pregnant mice caused higher blood sugar because the pancreas didn't release enough insulin. In pregnant women, higher kisspeptin levels were linked to better insulin responses, and women with gestational diabetes had lower kisspeptin.
Abstract
During pregnancy the maternal pancreatic islets of Langerhans undergo adaptive changes to compensate for gestational insulin resistance. Kisspeptin has been shown to stimulate insulin release, through its receptor, GPR54. The placenta releases high levels of kisspeptin into the maternal circulation, suggesting a role in modulating the islet adaptation to pregnancy. In the present study we show that pharmacological blockade of endogenous kisspeptin in pregnant mice resulted in impaired glucose homeostasis. This glucose intolerance was due to a reduced insulin response to glucose as opposed to any effect on insulin sensitivity. A β cell-specific GPR54-knockdown mouse line was found to exhibit glucose intolerance during pregnancy, with no phenotype observed outside of pregnancy. Furthermore, in pregnant women circulating kisspeptin levels significantly correlated with insulin responses to oral glucose challenge and were significantly lower in women with gestational diabetes (GDM) compared with those without GDM. Thus, kisspeptin represents a placental signal that plays a physiological role in the islet adaptation to pregnancy, maintaining maternal glucose homeostasis by acting through the β cell GPR54 receptor. Our data suggest reduced placental kisspeptin production, with consequent impaired kisspeptin-dependent β cell compensation, may be a factor in the development of GDM in humans.
Study Information
pubmed
2019
2019-10-17T00:00:00.000Z
10.1172/jci.insight.124540
37
57