Kisspeptin Activates Ankrd 26 Gene Expression in Migrating Embryonic GnRH Neurons.
Soga. Tomoko T; Lim. Wei Ling WL; Khoo. Alan Soo-Beng AS; Parhar. Ishwar S IS
Key Findings
- Kisspeptin‑10 (1 nM) did not alter expression of genes related to cell proliferation or apoptosis in embryonic GnRH neurons.
- Exposure to kisspeptin‑10 significantly increased ANKRD26 gene expression in these neurons.
- The up‑regulation of ANKRD26 suggests a previously unknown role in kisspeptin‑GPR54 signaling that may regulate neuronal migration.
Practical Outcomes
- The research is purely mechanistic and does not provide actionable dosing, safety, or performance guidance for humans. For biohackers, it serves as background knowledge about kisspeptin’s broader cellular effects, but there’s no current protocol to apply for longevity, metabolism, or performance.
Summary
Scientists discovered that a short fragment of the hormone kisspeptin (kisspeptin‑10) can switch on a gene called ANKRD26 in migrating brain cells that produce GnRH, but it doesn’t affect genes tied to cell growth or death. This hints at a new way kisspeptin might control cell movement, though it’s a basic, early‑stage finding.
Abstract
Kisspeptin, a newly discovered neuropeptide, regulates gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH). Kisspeptins are a large RF-amide family of peptides. The kisspeptin coded by KiSS-1 gene is a 145-amino acid protein that is cleaved to C-terminal peptide kisspeptin-10. G-protein-coupled receptor 54 (GPR54) has been identified as a kisspeptin receptor, and it is expressed in GnRH neurons and in a variety of cancer cells. In this study, enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) labeled GnRH cells with migratory properties, which express GPR54, served as a model to study the effects of kisspeptin on cell migration. We monitored EGFP-GnRH neuronal migration in brain slide culture of embryonic day 14 transgenic rat by live cell imaging system and studied the effects of kisspeptin-10 (1 nM) treatment for 36 h on GnRH migration. Furthermore, to determine kisspeptin-induced molecular pathways related with apoptosis and cytoskeletal changes during neuronal migration, we studied the expression levels of candidate genes in laser-captured EGFP-GnRH neurons by real-time PCR. We found that there was no change in the expression level of genes related to cell proliferation and apoptosis. The expression of ankyrin repeat domain-containing protein (ankrd) 26 in EGFP-GnRH neurons was upregulated by the exposure to kisspeptin. These studies suggest that ankrd 26 gene plays an unidentified role in regulating neuronal movement mediated by kisspeptin-GPR54 signaling, which could be a potential pathway to suppress cell migration.
Study Information
pubmed
2016
2016-03-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.3389/fendo.2016.00015
5
67