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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
2016 pubmed 22 citations

Kisspeptin-10 and the G protein-coupled receptor 54 are differentially expressed in the canine pregnant uterus and trophoblast cells.

Schäfer-Somi. S S; Ay. S S SS; Kaya. D D; Sözmen. M M; Beceriklisoy. H B HB; Ağaoğlu. A R AR; Fındık. M M; van Haeften. T T; Aslan. S S

Key Findings

  • Kisspeptin-10 levels are higher in non-pregnant dog uteri and drop during pregnancy.
  • The receptor GPR54 shows higher expression before embryo attachment and varies across gestational stages.
  • Both kisspeptin-10 and GPR54 are found in specific uterine and trophoblast cell types, indicating differential regulation during pregnancy.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers and self‑experimenters, this research does not provide actionable information on using kisspeptin‑10 for human health, longevity, or performance. It is a basic animal study about reproductive biology, so it has no direct protocol or dosage implications for human self‑optimization.

Summary

The study looked at how the hormone kisspeptin-10 and its receptor GPR54 are present in the uterus of pregnant dogs at different stages. It found that both proteins are present, but their levels change during pregnancy, with less kisspeptin-10 in the uterus once pregnancy starts and varying amounts of the receptor in different uterine cells.

Abstract

Uterine tissue was collected from bitches after ovariohysterectomy at different times after ovulation. Samples were assigned to four groups: metestrous non-pregnant, day 10-12, n = 4; pre-implantation, day 10-12, n = 9; post-implantation, day 18-25, n = 13; mid-gestation, day 30-40, n = 7. RT-qPCR detection was performed for kiss1 and the G protein-coupled receptor 54 (GPR54, specific receptor for kisspeptin). In addition, immunohistochemistry was performed for detection of kisspeptin-10 (KP-10), GPR54, as well as pan-cytokeratin and vimentin. The latter two were included to differentiate the different placental cell types. The percentage of positive stained cells was evaluated, and an immunoreactivity score (IRS) was obtained by multiplying the labelling intensity score (0-3) with the percentage of immunolabelled cells (range: 0-300). In non-pregnant and pre-implantation tissues, gene expression was highly variable for kiss1 and GPR54. Expression of GPR54 was higher before embryo adhesion than during post-implantation and mid-gestation (p < .05), whereas there was no difference found between groups for kiss1. Except during the pre-implantation period, KP-10 expression was higher in the non-pregnant uterus compared to all gestational periods investigated, indicating a pregnancy-related downregulation. In the pre-implantation period, KP-10 was present in larger vessels only, whereas the presence of GPR54 in vessels was found in all samples, with most labelling in the post-implantation period. KP-10 was present in superficial uterine glands, GPR54 in superficial and deep uterine glands of the post-implantation uterus. In myocytes, the highest staining for KP-10 was seen in the non-pregnant uterus, whereas the highest staining for GPR54 was seen in post-implantation and mid-gestation. Syncytiotrophoblast cells stained for both KP-10 and GPR54 in post-implantation and mid-gestation, with maximum intensity for GPR54 in the latter. We conclude that KP-10 and GPR54 are expressed in the canine uterus and trophoblast cells. However, during pregnancy, expression of both proteins seems to be differentially regulated.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2016

Date

2016-10-23T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1111/rda.12818

Citations

22

References

27