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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 1
2012 pubmed 48 citations

Kisspeptin-10 inhibits cell migration in vitro via a receptor-GSK3 beta-FAK feedback loop in HTR8SVneo cells.

Roseweir. A K AK; Katz. A A AA; Millar. R P RP

Key Findings

  • Kisspeptin‑10 binds to HTR8SVneo placental cells but does not trigger typical inositol phosphate signaling
  • At 100 nM, kisspeptin‑10 sharply reduces cell migration in vitro
  • The inhibition works through a cascade that phosphorylates GSK3β (inactivating it), releases β‑catenin, and alters FAK and ERK signaling

Practical Outcomes

  • The study shows a molecular way kisspeptin‑10 can block cell movement, but it’s an early‑stage lab finding with no clear dosage or safety data for humans. For biohackers, there’s no actionable protocol yet, and the relevance to longevity or performance is minimal.

Summary

Researchers found that a short piece of the hormone kisspein, called kisspeptin‑10, can stop certain placental cells from moving in a dish by turning on a chain of signals inside the cells. This effect happens at a concentration of about 100 nM and involves blocking a protein called GSK3β and changing how other proteins that control cell adhesion behave.

Abstract

Kisspeptin inhibits cancer cell metastasis and placental trophoblast cell migration. Kisspeptin gene expression in the placenta and circulating kisspeptin levels change during normal pregnancy and they are altered in preeclampsia. We therefore assessed the effect of kisspeptin-10 on the in vitro migration of a human placental cell line derived from first trimester extravillious trophoblasts (HTR8SVneo). HTR8SVneo cells specifically bound 125I-Kisspeptin-10 but kisspeptin-10 did not induce inositol phosphate production. Cell migration was inhibited by kisspeptin-10 with a maximal inhibition at 100nM. The signaling pathways involved in inhibition of cell migration were examined. Treatment with kisspeptin-10 elicited phosphorylation of GSK3 beta at Ser9 (which inhibits activity), with a 3-fold increase at 5 min. Transient phosphorylation of ERK1/2 and p38MAPK peaked at 10min. Phosphorylation of focal adhesion kinase (FAK) at Tyr925 increased 3-fold at 10 min. Inhibition of GSK3 beta correlated with release of beta-catenin into the cytoplasm. These signaling events were differentially blocked by inhibitors of G(q/11), Src, EGFR, PI(3)K, PKC and MEK. The data suggest that kisspeptin/GPR54 EGF-receptor transactivation leads to phosphorylation of ERK1/2, causing activation of p90rsk which in turn inhibits GSK3 beta via Ser9 phosphorylation. Inactivation of GSK3 beta results in release of beta-catenin into the cytoplasm, affecting cell-cell adhesion and Tyr925 phosphorylation of FAK, which increases phosphorylation of ERK1/2 via RAS/Raf-1 creating a feedback loop to enhance the effects on migration. These findings indicate that kisspeptin-10 inhibits the migration of human placental trophoblast-derived HTR8SVneo cells by stimulating complex ERK1/2-p90rsk-GSK3 beta-FAK feedback interactions.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2012

Date

2012-02-18T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.placenta.2012.02.001

Citations

48

References

45