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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 1
2014 pubmed 27 citations

Acute injection and chronic perfusion of kisspeptin elicit gonadotropins release but fail to trigger ovulation in the mare.

Decourt. Caroline C; Caraty. Alain A; Briant. Christine C; Guillaume. Daniel D; Lomet. Didier D; Chesneau. Didier D; Lardic. Lionel L; Duchamp. Guy G; Reigner. Fabrice F; Monget. Philippe P; Dufourny. Laurence L; Beltramo. Massimiliano M; Dardente. Hugues H

Key Findings

  • eKp10 causes rapid, transient spikes in LH and FSH in mares
  • eKp10 never triggers ovulation in horses, unlike in sheep
  • The hormone’s effect is consistent across seasons and dosing methods

Practical Outcomes

  • For DIY health enthusiasts, kisspeptin‑10 isn’t a reliable way to induce ovulation in horses or likely other species. The study shows that results in one animal (sheep) don’t automatically apply to others, so caution is needed before using kisspeptin for reproductive hacks.

Summary

Injecting the horse version of kisspeptin-10 makes the blood levels of LH and FSH jump up quickly, but the rise is short‑lived and it never makes a mare ovulate, even when given continuously.

Abstract

Kisspeptin has emerged as the most potent gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) secretagogue and appears to represent the penultimate step in the central control of reproduction. In the sheep, we showed that kisspeptin could be used to manipulate gonadotropin secretion and control ovulation. Prompted by these results, we decided to investigate whether kisspeptin could be used as an ovulation-inducing agent in another photoperiodic domestic mammal, the horse. Equine kisspeptin-10 (eKp10) was administered intravenously as bolus injections or short- to long-term perfusions to Welsh pony mares, either during the anestrus season or at various stages of the cycle during the breeding season. In all the experimental conditions, eKp10 reliably increased peripheral concentrations of both luteinizing hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone. The nature of the response to eKp10 was consistent across experimental conditions and physiological states: the increase in gonadotropins was always rapid and essentially transient even when eKp10 was perfused for prolonged periods. Furthermore, eKp10 consistently failed to induce ovulation in the mare. To gain insights into the underlying mechanisms, we used acute injections or perfusions of GnRH. We also cloned the equine orthologues of the kisspeptin precursor and Kiss1r; this was justified by the facts that the current equine genome assembly predicted an amino acid difference between eKp10 and Kp10 in other species while an equine orthologue for Kiss1r was missing altogether. In light of these findings, potential reasons for the divergence in the response to kisspeptin between ewe and mare are discussed. Our data highlight that kisspeptin is not a universal ovulation-inducing agent.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2014

Date

2014-02-20T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1095/biolreprod.113.114157

Citations

27

References

66