KISS1R induces invasiveness of estrogen receptor-negative human mammary epithelial and breast cancer cells.
Cvetkovic. Donna D; Dragan. Magdalena M; Leith. Sean J SJ; Mir. Zuhaib M ZM; Leong. Hon S HS; Pampillo. Macarena M; Lewis. John D JD; Babwah. Andy V AV; Bhattacharya. Moshmi M
Key Findings
- KP‑10 triggers invasion and a mesenchymal (more mobile) state in ER‑negative mammary cells
- ER‑positive cells resist KP‑10‑induced invasion, indicating estrogen receptor protects against this effect
- KISS1R works together with IQGAP1 to activate EGFR signaling, driving the invasive behavior
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, there’s no actionable benefit to using kisspeptin‑10 for longevity or performance, and it may pose cancer‑related risks in certain contexts. Avoid experimenting with this peptide unless under medical supervision and unless you have a specific, clinically‑validated reason.
Summary
The study shows that the peptide kisspeptin‑10 can make certain breast cells (those without estrogen receptors) more invasive, which could help tumors spread, while cells with estrogen receptors are not affected. This suggests kisspeptin‑10 isn’t a safe or useful supplement for general health or performance, especially for people at risk of estrogen‑negative cancers.
Abstract
Kisspeptins (KPs), peptide products of the KISS1 metastasis-suppressor gene, are endogenous ligands for a G protein-coupled receptor (KISS1R). KISS1 acts as a metastasis suppressor in numerous human cancers. However, recent studies have demonstrated that an increase in KISS1 and KISS1R expression in patient breast tumors correlates with higher tumor grade and metastatic potential. We have shown that KP-10 stimulates invasion of estrogen receptor α (ERα)-negative MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells via transactivation of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). Here, we report that either KP-10 treatment of ERα-negative nonmalignant mammary epithelial MCF10A cells or expression of KISS1R in MCF10A cells induced a mesenchymal phenotype and stimulated invasiveness. Similarly, exogenous expression of KISS1R in ERα-negative SKBR3 breast cancer cells was sufficient to trigger invasion and induced extravasation in vivo. In contrast, KP-10 failed to transactivate EGFR or stimulate invasiveness in the ERα-positive MCF7 and T47D breast cancer cells. This suggested that ERα negatively regulates KISS1R-dependent breast cancer cell migration, invasion, and EGFR transactivation. In support of this, we found that these KP-10-induced effects were ablated upon exogenous expression of ERα in the MDA-MB-231 cells, by down-regulating KISS1R expression. Lastly, we have identified IQGAP1, an actin cytoskeletal binding protein as a novel binding partner of KISS1R, and have shown that KISS1R regulates EGFR transactivation in breast cancer cells in an IQGAP1-dependent manner. Overall, our data strongly suggest that the ERα status of mammary cells dictates whether KISS1R may be a novel clinical target for treating breast cancer metastasis.
Study Information
pubmed
2013
2013-03-24T00:00:00.000Z
10.1210/en.2012-2164
51
79