Kisspeptin modulates fertilization capacity of mouse spermatozoa.
Hsu. Meng-Chieh MC; Wang. Jyun-Yuan JY; Lee. Yue-Jia YJ; Jong. De-Shien DS; Tsui. Kuan-Hao KH; Chiu. Chih-Hsien CH
Key Findings
- Kisspeptin and its receptor KISS1R are present in male (Leydig cells, sperm) and female (cumulus‑oocyte complex, oviduct) reproductive tissues.
- Treating mouse sperm with kisspeptin‑10 rapidly increases intracellular calcium, a signal needed for fertilization.
- Using a kisspeptin antagonist (peptide 234) reduces in‑vitro fertilization rates, suggesting the kisspeptin system supports successful fertilization.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers interested in fertility, the study suggests that enhancing kisspeptin signaling might improve sperm function, but no specific dosing or protocol is provided yet. It highlights kisspeptin as a potential target for future fertility‑boosting interventions, warranting further research before practical use.
Summary
In mice, the hormone kisspeptin and its receptor are found in sperm and egg‑related cells. Adding a short kisspeptin peptide (kisspeptin‑10) makes sperm calcium levels go up, which is important for fertilization, while blocking kisspeptin lowers IVF success. This points to kisspeptin playing a role in the fertilization process.
Abstract
Kisspeptin acts as an upstream regulator of the hypothalamus-pituitary-gonad axis, which is one of the main regulatory systems for mammalian reproduction. Kiss1 and its receptor Kiss1r (also known as G protein-coupled receptor 54 (Gpr54)) are expressed in various organs, but their functions are not well understood. The purpose of this study was to investigate the expression profiles and functions of kisspeptin and KISS1R in the reproductive tissues of imprinting control region mice. To identify the expression pattern and location of kisspeptin and KISS1R in gonads, testes and ovarian tissues were examined by immunohistochemical or immunofluorescent staining. Kisspeptin and KISS1R were expressed primarily in Leydig cells and seminiferous tubules respectively. KISS1R was specifically localized in the acrosomal region of spermatids and mature spermatozoa. Kisspeptin, but not KISS1R, was expressed in the cumulus-oocyte complex and oviductal epithelium of ovarian and oviductal tissues. The sperm intracellular calcium concentrations significantly increased in response to treatment with kisspeptin 10 in Fluo-4-loaded sperm. The IVF rates decreased after treatment of sperm with the kisspeptin antagonist peptide 234. These results suggest that kisspeptin and KISS1R might be involved in the fertilization process in the female reproductive tract. In summary, this study indicates that kisspeptin and KISS1R are expressed in female and male gametes, respectively, and in mouse reproductive tissues. These data strongly suggest that the kisspeptin system could regulate mammalian fertilization and reproduction.
Study Information
pubmed
2014
2014-02-24T00:00:00.000Z
10.1530/rep-13-0368