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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
2018 pubmed

Post mortem single-cell labeling with DiI and immunoelectron microscopy unveil the fine structure of kisspeptin neurons in humans.

Takács. Szabolcs S; Bardóczi. Zsuzsanna Z; Skrapits. Katalin K; Göcz. Balázs B; Váczi. Viktória V; Maglóczky. Zsófia Z; Szűcs. Iván I; Rácz. Gergely G; Matolcsy. András A; Dhillo. Waljit S WS; Watanabe. Masahiko M; Kádár. Andrea A; Fekete. Csaba C; Kalló. Imre I; Hrabovszky. Erik E

Key Findings

  • About 80% of kisspeptin neurons are bipolar, with fewer tripolar or unipolar forms
  • Dendrites have many tiny spine‑like appendages and receive inputs from GABA, glutamate, and kisspeptin terminals
  • Synapses onto these neurons are asymmetric and contain both regular vesicles and dense‑core granules, suggesting mixed glutamatergic and peptide signaling

Practical Outcomes

  • The findings are interesting for basic brain science but offer no direct guidance for dosing, supplementation, or protocols that biohackers could apply. It mainly expands knowledge of how kisspeptin neurons are wired in humans.

Summary

Scientists examined the tiny structure of kisspeptin‑producing brain cells in human tissue using a special dye and electron microscopy. They mapped how these cells look, how many branches they have, and what kinds of nerve connections they receive, but the study does not test any health‑boosting uses of kisspeptin.

Abstract

Kisspeptin (KP) synthesizing neurons of the hypothalamic infundibular region are critically involved in the central regulation of fertility; these cells regulate pulsatile gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) secretion and mediate sex steroid feedback signals to GnRH neurons. Fine structural analysis of the human KP system is complicated by the use of post mortem tissues. To gain better insight into the neuroanatomy of the somato-dendritic cellular compartment, we introduced the diolistic labeling of immunohistochemically identified KP neurons using a gene gun loaded with the lipophilic dye, DiI. Confocal microscopic studies of primary dendrites in 100-µm-thick tissue sections established that 79.3% of KP cells were bipolar, 14.1% were tripolar, and 6.6% were unipolar. Primary dendrites branched sparsely, contained numerous appendages (9.1 ± 1.1 spines/100 µm dendrite), and received rich innervation from GABAergic, glutamatergic, and KP-containing terminals. KP neuron synaptology was analyzed with immunoelectron microscopy on perfusion-fixed specimens. KP axons established frequent contacts and classical synapses on unlabeled, and on KP-immunoreactive somata, dendrites, and spines. Synapses were asymmetric and the presynaptic structures contained round and regular synaptic vesicles, in addition to dense-core granules. Although immunofluorescent studies failed to detect vesicular glutamate transporter isoforms in KP axons, ultrastructural characteristics of synaptic terminals suggested use of glutamatergic, in addition to peptidergic, neurotransmission. In summary, immunofluorescent and DiI labeling of KP neurons in thick hypothalamic sections and immunoelectron microscopic studies of KP-immunoreactive neurons in brains perfusion-fixed shortly post mortem allowed us to identify previously unexplored fine structural features of KP neurons in the mediobasal hypothalamus of humans.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2018

Date

2018-01-29T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1007/s00429-018-1610-8