Kisspeptin in the early post-partum of the dairy cow.
Rizzo. Annalisa A; Ceci. Edmondo E; Guaricci. Antonio Ciro AC; Sciorsci. Raffaele Luigi RL
Key Findings
- Kp10 levels stay flat for the first 10‑12 days after calving, then increase significantly at day 14 and fall by day 16.
- Progesterone and estrogen levels remain within normal ranges during this period.
- The authors suggest the Kp10 surge may boost GnRH and gonadotropin release, promoting follicle growth and a positive feedback loop with estrogen.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this study offers little direct guidance—there’s no dosage, timing, or protocol for humans. It mainly adds basic knowledge about how kisspeptin behaves in postpartum cows, which may be of interest only to those studying reproductive biology.
Summary
Researchers measured a hormone called kisspeptin‑10 (Kp10) in dairy cows after they gave birth and found it spikes around two weeks later before dropping again. The rise likely helps kick‑start the brain's reproductive signals, but the study only describes what happens in cows, not how to use it in people.
Abstract
Recently, a new molecule, kisspeptin (Kp), and in particular Kisspeptin 10 (Kp10), was implicated in stimulating the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis. The aim of this study was to evaluate circulating Kp10 levels in the early post-partum period of the dairy cow. Blood samples were collected from 40 dairy cows, at 10 (T10), 12 (T12), 14 (T14) and 16 (T16) days after calving. Progesterone (P4) levels were evaluated using ELISA, and levels of oestrogens (E2) and Kp were evaluated using a radio-immunologic method. After an initial plateau, Kp10 significantly increased at T14 and decreased at T16. The P4 and E2 mean serum values remained in the physiological range. It is likely that Kp10 enhanced hypothalamic GnRH release as well as pituitary gonadotropin secretion, thus promoting follicular growth and the increase in E2 levels, which might have further enhanced Kp10 release through a positive feedback loop. To our best knowledge, this is the first report on the range of Kp10 blood concentration during the early post-partum period in the dairy cow. The results of our study will increase our current understanding of the complex neuro-endocrine crosstalk underlying the resumption of ovarian cyclicity in the dairy cow.
Study Information
pubmed
2018
2018-10-08T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/rda.13325
7
12