Kisspeptin Stimulation of Prolactin Secretion Requires Kiss1 Receptor but Not in Tuberoinfundibular Dopaminergic Neurons.
Aquino. Nayara S S NSS; Kokay. Ilona C IC; Perez. Carolina Thörn CT; Ladyman. Sharon R SR; Henriques. Patricia C PC; Silva. Juneo F JF; Broberger. Christian C; Grattan. David R DR; Szawka. Raphael E RE
Key Findings
- Kisspeptin‑10 raises prolactin in mice only when the Kiss1 receptor is functional.
- TIDA dopamine neurons lack Kiss1 receptors and are not directly activated by kisspeptin‑10.
- Kiss1 receptors are present in other hypothalamic regions (Pe and ARC), indicating a non‑dopaminergic route for prolactin stimulation.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this means that using kisspeptin could increase prolactin, which may affect hormone balance, fertility, and possibly mood, but the effect is mediated through brain areas that are not directly linked to dopamine control. There are no dosage guidelines or clear performance benefits, so caution is advised and more human data are needed before adding kisspeptin to any health‑optimization protocol.
Summary
The study shows that kisspeptin-10 can boost prolactin levels, but it does this through the Kiss1 receptor in brain cells that are not the usual dopamine‑producing neurons that control prolactin. The dopamine‑producing (TIDA) neurons don’t have the Kiss1 receptor and don’t react directly to kisspeptin, suggesting the hormone works via other brain pathways.
Abstract
Kisspeptin has been shown to stimulate prolactin secretion. We investigated whether kisspeptin acts through the Kiss1 receptor (Kiss1r) to regulate dopamine and prolactin. Initially, we evaluated prolactin response in a Kiss1r-deficient mouse line, in which Kiss1r had been knocked into GnRH neurons (Kiss1r-/-R). Intracerebroventricular kisspeptin-10 (Kp-10) increased prolactin release in wild-type but not in Kiss1r-/-R female mice. In ovariectomized, estradiol-treated rats, the Kiss1r antagonist kisspeptin-234 abolished the Kp-10-induced increase in prolactin release but failed to prevent the concomitant reduction in the activity of tuberoinfundibular dopaminergic (TIDA) neurons, as determined by the 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid/dopamine ratio in the median eminence. Using whole-cell patch clamp recordings in juvenile male rats, we found no direct effect of Kp-10 on the electrical activity of TIDA neurons. In addition, dual-label in situ hybridization in the hypothalamus of female rats showed that Kiss1r is expressed in the periventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (Pe) and arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus (ARC) but not in tyrosine hydroxylase (Th)-expressing neurons. Kisspeptin also has affinity for the neuropeptide FF receptor 1 (Npffr1), which was expressed in the majority of Pe dopaminergic neurons but only in a low proportion of TIDA neurons in the ARC. Our findings demonstrate that Kiss1r is necessary to the effect of kisspeptin on prolactin secretion, although TIDA neurons lack Kiss1r and are electrically unresponsive to kisspeptin. Thus, kisspeptin is likely to stimulate prolactin secretion via Kiss1r in nondopaminergic neurons, whereas the colocalization of Npffr1 and Th suggests that Pe dopaminergic neurons may play a role in the kisspeptin-induced inhibition of dopamine release.
Study Information
pubmed
2019
2019-03-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1210/en.2018-00932
19
53