Kisspeptin as a link between metabolism and reproduction: evidences from rodent and primate studies.
Wahab. Fazal F; Atika. Bibi B; Shahab. Muhammad M
Key Findings
- Kisspeptin signaling in the hypothalamus links metabolic status to GnRH neuron activity
- Animal studies (rodents and primates) suggest kisspeptin is a key conduit for metabolism‑reproduction communication
- Kisspeptin does not directly affect feeding behavior
Practical Outcomes
- At this stage the findings are mostly scientific and don’t translate into a specific supplement or dosage for biohackers. It highlights kisspeptin as a potential future target for interventions aimed at balancing metabolism and reproductive health, but more human research is needed before any real‑world protocol can be recommended.
Summary
The paper reviews animal studies showing that the brain chemical kisspeptin helps tell the reproductive system about the body's energy state, acting as a bridge between metabolism and fertility, but it doesn’t seem to change appetite itself.
Abstract
Changes in metabolic status gate reproductive activity by still incompletely deciphered mechanisms. Many neuropeptides have been shown to be involved in restraining hypothalamic gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) release under conditions of negative energy balance. Broadly, on the basis of their effect on feeding, these can be grouped as orexigenic and anorexigenic neuropeptides. Reciprocally correlated, in response to changes in systemic concentrations of metabolic hormones, the secretion of orexigenic neuropeptides increases while that of anorexigenic neuropeptides decreases during conditions of food restriction. Recently, kisspeptin signaling in hypothalamus has appeared as a pivotal regulator of the GnRH pulse generator. Kisspeptin apparently does not affect feeding, but in light of accumulating data, it has emerged as one of the major conduits in relaying body metabolic status information to GnRH neurons. The present review examines such data obtained from rodent and primate models, which suggest kisspeptin-Kiss1r signaling as a possible pathway providing a link between metabolism and reproduction.
Study Information
pubmed
2013
2013-02-13T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.metabol.2013.01.015
51
154