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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 1
2013 pubmed 42 citations

Kisspeptin excitation of GnRH neurons.

Rønnekleiv. Oline K OK; Kelly. Martin J MJ

Key Findings

  • Kisspeptin binds GPR54 (Kiss1R) on GnRH neurons to stimulate hormone release
  • It increases excitatory inputs (GABA‑A and glutamate) onto GnRH cells
  • It blocks A‑type and inward‑rectifier Kâș currents and opens TRPC cation channels, causing lasting depolarization

Practical Outcomes

  • The findings are mostly basic science and don’t translate into immediate protocols for biohackers. While they highlight kisspeptin’s role in reproductive hormone regulation, there’s no guidance on dosing, safety, or performance benefits for longevity or metabolic health.

Summary

Kisspeptin is a natural peptide that talks to brain cells controlling reproductive hormones. When it binds its receptor on GnRH neurons, it makes those cells fire more by boosting excitatory signals and turning off certain potassium channels, leading to more hormone release. The paper reviews how this works but doesn’t give any dosing or practical tips.

Abstract

Kisspeptin binding to its cognate G protein-coupled receptor (GPR54, aka Kiss1R) in gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) neurons stimulates peptide release and activation of the reproductive axis in mammals. Kisspeptin has pronounced pre- and postsynaptic effects, with the latter dominating the excitability of GnRH neurons. Presynaptically, kisspeptin increases the excitatory drive (both GABA-A and glutamate) to GnRH neurons and postsynaptically, kisspeptin inhibits an A-type and inwardly rectifying K(+) (Kir 6.2 and GIRK) currents and activates nonselective cation (TRPC) currents to cause long-lasting depolarization and increased action potential firing. The signaling cascades and the multiple intracellular targets of kisspeptin actions in native GnRH neurons are continuing to be elucidated. This review summarizes our current state of knowledge about kisspeptin signaling in GnRH neurons.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2013

DOI

10.1007/978-1-4614-6199-9_6

Citations

42

References

133