KISS1 in breast cancer progression and autophagy.
Ulasov. Ilya V IV; Borovjagin. Anton V AV; Timashev. Peter P; Cristofanili. Massimo M; Welch. Danny R DR
Key Findings
- KISS1 expression is often reduced in metastatic tumors, suggesting a loss of its natural tumor‑suppressing function.
- The protein can inhibit the colonization of cancer cells at distant sites, acting as a metastasis suppressor.
- KISS1 may also affect tumor angiogenesis, autophagy, and apoptosis, indicating a complex role that could both limit and promote cancer cell invasion.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers and self‑experimenters, this study does not provide any actionable dosing or protocol for kisspeptin‑10. It mainly highlights that altering kisspeptin levels could have unpredictable effects on cancer biology, so any supplementation should be approached with caution and only under professional guidance. The main takeaway is that more research is needed before considering kisspeptin‑10 for health or longevity purposes.
Summary
KISS1 (the source of kisspeptin-10) is a protein that normally helps keep cells from spreading and forming new tumors. In many cancers, especially breast cancer, its levels are lower, which may let cancer cells spread more easily. The protein also seems to influence how cancer cells manage stress, grow new blood vessels, and die, making it a possible marker for cancer progression and a future drug target, but there are no clear ways to use this information right now.
Abstract
Tumor suppressors are cellular proteins typically expressed in normal (non-cancer) cells that not only regulate such cellular functions as proliferation, migration and adhesion, but can also be secreted into extracellular space and serve as biomarkers for pathological conditions or tumor progression. KISS1, a precursor for several shorter peptides, known as metastin (Kisspeptin-54), Kisspeptin-14, Kisspeptin-13 and Kisspeptin-10, is one of those metastasis suppressor proteins, whose expression is commonly downregulated in the metastatic tumors of various origins. The commonly accepted role of KISS1 in metastatic tumor progression mechanism is the ability of this protein to suppress colonization of disseminated cancer cells in distant organs critical for the formation of the secondary tumor foci. Besides, recent evidence suggests involvement of KISS1 in the mechanisms of tumor angiogenesis, autophagy and apoptosis regulation, suggesting a possible role in both restricting and promoting cancer cell invasion. Here, we discuss the role of KISS1 in regulating metastases, the link between KISS1 expression and the autophagy-related biology of cancer cells and the perspectives of using KISS1 as a potential diagnostic marker for cancer progression as well as a new anti-cancer therapeutics.
Study Information
pubmed
2019
2019-09-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s10555-019-09814-4
23
113