Kisspeptin neurons co-express met-enkephalin and galanin in the rostral periventricular region of the female mouse hypothalamus.
Porteous. Robert R; Petersen. Sandra L SL; Yeo. Shel Hwa SH; Bhattarai. Janardhan P JP; Ciofi. Philippe P; de Tassigny. Xavier D'anglemont XD; Colledge. William H WH; Caraty. Alain A; Herbison. Allan E AE
Key Findings
- A subset of kisspeptin neurons in the RP3V region also contain galanin (about 7% of kisspeptin cells)
- A larger subset of kisspeptin neurons also contain met‑enkephalin (28‑38% of kisspeptin cells)
- Kisspeptin neurons do not co‑express neurotensin or CCK, and arcuate kisspeptin neurons express galanin but not met‑enkephalin
Practical Outcomes
- At this stage the work is purely mechanistic and offers no concrete dosing or protocol for biohackers. It simply highlights that kisspeptin’s actions may be influenced by other neuropeptides, which could become relevant if future therapies target fertility or hormone balance.
Summary
Scientists discovered that brain cells in female mice that make the hormone‑related peptide kisspeptin also produce other small proteins called galanin and met‑enkephalin, which could change how these cells control reproductive hormones. This is a basic science finding and doesn’t give any direct advice on using kisspeptin for health or performance.
Abstract
It is now well established that the kisspeptin neurons of the hypothalamus play a key role in regulating the activity of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) neurons. The population of kisspeptin neurons residing in the rostral periventricular region of the third ventricle (RP3V), encompassing the anteroventral periventricular (AVPV) and periventricular preoptic nuclei (PVpo), are implicated in the generation of the preovulatory GnRH surge mechanism and puberty onset in female rodents. The present study examined whether these kisspeptin neurons may express other neuropeptides in the adult female mouse. Initially, the distribution of galanin, neurotensin, met-enkephalin (mENK), and cholecystokinin (CCK)-immunoreactive cells was determined within the RP3V of colchicine-treated mice. Subsequent experiments, using a new kisspeptin-10 antibody raised in sheep, examined the relationship of these neuropeptides to kisspeptin neurons. No evidence was found for expression of neurotensin or CCK by RP3V kisspeptin neurons, but subpopulations of kisspeptin neurons were observed to express galanin and mENK. Dual-labeled RP3V kisspeptin/galanin cells represented 7% of all kisspeptin and 21% of all galanin neurons whereas dual-labeled kisspeptin/mENK cells represented 28-38% of kisspeptin neurons and 58-68% of the mENK population, depending on location within the AVPV or PVpo. Kisspeptin neurons in the arcuate nucleus were also found to express galanin but not mENK. These observations indicate that, like the kisspeptin population of the arcuate nucleus, kisspeptin neurons in the RP3V also co-express a range of neuropeptides. This pattern of co-expression should greatly increase the dynamic range with which kisspeptin neurons can modulate the activity of their afferent neurons.
Study Information
pubmed
2011
2011-12-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1002/cne.22716
80
65