The effects of kisspeptin-10 on reproductive hormone release show sexual dimorphism in humans.
Jayasena. Channa N CN; Nijher. Gurjinder M K GM; Comninos. Alexander N AN; Abbara. Ali A; Januszewki. Adam A; Vaal. Meriel L ML; Sriskandarajah. Labosshy L; Murphy. Kevin G KG; Farzad. Zohreh Z; Ghatei. Mohammad A MA; Bloom. Stephen R SR; Dhillo. Waljit S WS
Key Findings
- In men, an IV bolus of kisspeptin-10 as low as 0.3 nmol/kg raises LH and 1.0 nmol/kg raises FSH.
- In women during the follicular phase, even high doses (up to 10 nmol/kg IV, 32 nmol/kg sub‑Q, or 720 pmol/kg/min infusion) do not change LH or FSH.
- In women during the pre‑ovulatory phase, a 10 nmol/kg IV bolus does increase LH and FSH.
Practical Outcomes
- For male biohackers looking to boost gonadotropins (and indirectly testosterone), a low‑dose IV kisspeptin‑10 bolus could be an effective protocol. For female users, timing is critical – the peptide only works around ovulation, so any self‑experiment should be scheduled for the pre‑ovulatory window. Follicular‑phase dosing appears ineffective, so resources are better spent on other strategies during that phase.
Summary
Kisspeptin-10 makes the pituitary release the hormones LH and FSH in healthy men at very low IV doses, but in women it only works when given right before ovulation. During the early part of the menstrual cycle (follicular phase) it does nothing, even at much higher doses.
Abstract
Kisspeptin peptides are critical in human reproductive physiology and are potential therapies for infertility. Kisspeptin-10 stimulates gonadotropin release in both male and female rodents. However, few studies have investigated the effects of kisspeptin-10 on gonadotropin release in humans, and none have investigated the effect in women. If kisspeptin is to be useful for treating reproductive disease, its effects in both men and women must be established. To compare the effects of kisspeptin-10 administration on reproductive hormone release in healthy men and women. Intravenous bolus kisspeptin-10 was administered to men and women (n = 4-5 per group). Subcutaneous bolus and i.v. infusion of kisspeptin-10 was also administered to female women (n = 4-5 per group). Circulating reproductive hormones were measured. In healthy men, serum LH and FSH were elevated after i.v. bolus kisspeptin-10, at doses as low as 0.3 and 1.0 nmol/kg, respectively. In healthy women during the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle, no alterations in serum gonadotropins were observed after i.v. bolus, s.c. bolus, or i.v. infusion of kisspeptin-10 at maximal doses of 10 nmol/kg, 32 nmol/kg, and 720 pmol/kg/min, respectively. In women during the preovulatory phase, serum LH and FSH were elevated after i.v. bolus kisspeptin-10 (10 nmol/kg). Kisspeptin-10 stimulates gonadotropin release in men as well as women during the preovulatory phase of menstrual cycle but fails to stimulate gonadotropin release in women during the follicular phase. The sexual dimorphism of the responsiveness of healthy men and women to kisspeptin-10 administration has important clinical implications for the potential of kisspeptin-10 to treat disorders of reproduction.
Study Information
pubmed
2011
2011-10-05T00:00:00.000Z
10.1210/jc.2011-1408
118
34