Sex steroid hormones do not enhance the direct stimulatory effect of kisspetin-10 on the secretion of growth hormone from bovine anterior pituitary cells.
Ezzat Ahmed. Ahmed A; Saito. Hayato H; Sawada. Tatsuru T; Yaegashi. Tomoyoshi T; Jin. Jin J; Sawai. Ken K; Yamashita. Tetsuro T; Hashizume. Tsutomu T
Key Findings
- Kisspeptin‑10 directly stimulates growth hormone release from bovine pituitary cells
- Sex steroids (estradiol, progesterone, testosterone) do not enhance kisspeptin‑10’s effect on growth hormone secretion
- The growth hormone‑releasing effect of kisspeptin‑10 is less potent than that of GHRH
Practical Outcomes
- Because the experiments used very high kisspeptin‑10 concentrations in cow cells, the results don’t translate into a usable protocol for humans. There’s no evidence that taking kisspeptin‑10 will boost growth hormone in people, and sex hormones won’t amplify any such effect. Biohackers should not consider this a viable GH‑enhancing strategy without further human research.
Summary
In simple terms, the study found that a short piece of the hormone kisspeptin (kisspeptin‑10) can make cow pituitary cells release growth hormone, but adding estrogen, progesterone, or testosterone doesn’t make this effect stronger. However, kisspeptin‑10 is much weaker at triggering growth hormone than the usual hormone‑releasing factor (GHRH). The work was done in isolated bovine cells, not in people.
Abstract
The aims of the present study were to clarify the effect of kisspeptin10 (Kp10) on the secretion of growth hormone (GH) from bovine anterior pituitary (AP) cells, and evaluate the ability of sex steroid hormones to enhance the sensitivity of somatotrophic cells to Kp10. AP cells prepared from 8-11-month-old castrated calves were incubated for 12 h with estradiol (E(2), 10(-8) mol/L),progesterone (P(4), 10(-8) mol/L), testosterone (T, 10(-8) mol/L), or vehicle only (control), and then for 2 h with Kp10. The amount of GH released in the medium was measured by a time-resolved fluoroimmunoassay. Kp10 (10(-6) or 10(-5) mol/L) significantly stimulated the secretion of GH from the AP cells regardless of steroid treatments (P < 0.05), and E(2), P(4), and T had no effect on this response. The GH-releasing response to growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH, 10(-8) mol/L) was significantly greater than that to Kp10 (P < 0.05). The present results suggest that Kp10 directly stimulates the release of GH from somatotrophic cells and sex steroid hormones do not enhance the sensitivity of these cells to Kp10. Furthermore, they suggest that the GH-releasing effect of Kp10 is less potent than that of GHRH.
Study Information
pubmed
2010
2010-10-04T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/j.1740-0929.2010.00815.x
2
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