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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
2016 pubmed 58 citations

Downregulation of miR-199b is associated with distant metastasis in colorectal cancer via activation of SIRT1 and inhibition of CREB/KISS1 signaling.

Shen. Zhan-Long ZL; Wang. Bo B; Jiang. Ke-Wei KW; Ye. Chun-Xiang CX; Cheng. Cheng C; Yan. Yi-Chao YC; Zhang. Ji-Zhun JZ; Yang. Yang Y; Gao. Zhi-Dong ZD; Ye. Ying-Jiang YJ; Wang. Shan S

Key Findings

  • miR-199b is significantly reduced in metastatic colorectal cancer and predicts poorer survival.
  • miR-199b directly targets SIRT1; lower miR-199b leads to higher SIRT1 activity.
  • SIRT1 suppresses KISS1 expression by de‑acetylating CREB, reducing its ability to turn on the KISS1 gene.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the findings do not translate into any immediate health or performance protocol. The research is focused on cancer biology, not on using kisspeptin‑10 for longevity, metabolism, or cognition, and it offers no dosage or safety guidance for human use.

Summary

The study found that a tiny RNA called miR-199b is lower in colorectal cancer that has spread to the liver. This loss lets a protein called SIRT1 become more active, which then shuts down the KISS1 gene (the source of the kisspeptin peptide) through a chain involving the CREB factor. Raising miR-199b levels or blocking SIRT1 reduced cancer cell spread and made chemotherapy work better, but the work is limited to cancer cells in the lab and mice.

Abstract

The progression of distant metastasis cascade is a multistep and complicated process, frequently leading to a poor prognosis in cancer patients. Recently, growing evidence has indicated that deregulation of microRNAs (miRNAs) contributes to tumorigenesis and tumor progression in colorectal cancer (CRC). In the present study, by comparing the miRNA expression profiles of CRC tissues and corresponding hepatic metastasis tissues, we established the downregulation of miR-199b in CRC metastasis tissues. The decrease in miR-199b expression was significantly correlated to late TNM stage and distant metastasis. Moreover, Kaplan-Meier curves showed that CRC patients with high expression level of miR-199b had a longer median survival. Functional assays results indicated that the restoration of miR-199b considerably reduced cell invasion and migration in vitro and in vivo, and increased the sensitivity to 5-FU and oxaliplatin. Further dual-luciferase reporter gene assays revealed that SIRT1 was the direct target of miR-199b in CRC. The expression of miR-199b was inversely correlated with SIRT1 in CRC specimens. SIRT1 knockdown produced effects on biological behavior that were similar to those of miR-199b overexpression. Furthermore, through Human Tumor Metastasis PCR Array we discovered KISS1 was one of the downstream targets of SIRT1. Silencing of SIRT1 upregulated KISS1 expression by enhancing the acetylation of the transcription factor CREB. The latter was further activated via binding to the promoter of KISS1 to induce transcription. Thus, we concluded that miR-199b regulates SIRT1/CREB/KISS1 signaling pathway and might serve as a prognosis marker or a novel therapeutic target for patients with CRC.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2016

Date

2016-06-07T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.18632/oncotarget.9042

Citations

58