Galanin Activates G Protein Gated Inwardly Rectifying Potassium Channels and Suppresses Kisspeptin-10 Activation of GnRH Neurons.
Constantin. Stephanie S; Wray. Susan S
Key Findings
- GnRH neurons only have the GalR1 galanin receptor
- Galanin (Gal1‑16) rapidly suppresses kisspeptin‑10‑induced activation of GnRH neurons
- The inhibition works through Gi/o signaling and GIRK potassium channels, lowering GnRH secretion
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this suggests that boosting galanin activity could dampen the kisspeptin‑driven GnRH surge, potentially influencing sex hormone levels. However, the research is in mouse brain tissue and offers no dosage or human‑focused protocol, so any attempts to modulate galanin should be approached with caution and further study.
Summary
The study shows that a brain chemical called galanin can quickly shut down the activation of GnRH neurons that is normally caused by the peptide kisspeptin‑10. It does this by binding to a specific galanin receptor (GalR1) and opening potassium channels, which quiets the neurons and cuts down GnRH hormone release.
Abstract
GnRH neurons are regulated by hypothalamic kisspeptin neurons. Recently, galanin was identified in a subpopulation of kisspeptin neurons. Although the literature thoroughly describes kisspeptin activation of GnRH neurons, little is known about the effects of galanin on GnRH neurons. This study investigated whether galanin could alter kisspeptin signaling to GnRH neurons. GnRH cells maintained in explants, known to display spontaneous calcium oscillations, and a long-lasting calcium response to kisspeptin-10 (kp-10), were used. First, transcripts for galanin receptors (GalRs) were examined. Only GalR1 was found in GnRH neurons. A series of experiments was then performed to determine the action of galanin on kp-10 activated GnRH neurons. Applied after kp-10 activation, galanin 1-16 (Gal1-16) rapidly suppressed kp-10 activation. Applied with kp-10, Gal1-16 prevented kp-10 activation until its removal. To determine the mechanism by which galanin inhibited kp-10 activation of GnRH neurons, Gal1-16 and galanin were applied to spontaneously active GnRH neurons. Both inhibited GnRH neuronal activity, independent of GnRH neuronal inputs. This inhibition was mimicked by a GalR1 agonist but not by GalR2 or GalR2/3 agonists. Although Gal1-16 inhibition relied on Gi/o signaling, it was independent of cAMP levels but sensitive to blockers of G protein-coupled inwardly rectifying potassium channels. A newly developed bioassay for GnRH detection showed Gal1-16 decreased the kp-10-evoked GnRH secretion below detection threshold. Together, this study shows that galanin is a potent regulator of GnRH neurons, possibly acting as a physiological break to kisspeptin excitation.
Study Information
pubmed
2016
2016-06-30T00:00:00.000Z
10.1210/en.2016-1064
22
83