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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 2
2012 pubmed

Prognostic role of KiSS-1 and possibility of therapeutic modality of metastin, the final peptide of the KiSS-1 gene, in urothelial carcinoma.

Takeda. Toshikazu T; Kikuchi. Eiji E; Mikami. Shuji S; Suzuki. Eriko E; Matsumoto. Kazuhiro K; Miyajima. Akira A; Okada. Yasunori Y; Oya. Mototsugu M

Key Findings

  • Low KiSS‑1 expression predicts more metastasis and lower overall survival in upper‑tract urothelial cancer
  • Metastin treatment cuts the invasiveness of aggressive bladder cancer cells in vitro
  • In mice, metastin blocks NF‑κB nuclear entry, lowers MMP‑9 activity, and dramatically reduces lung metastases, extending survival

Practical Outcomes

  • While the results are promising for cancer research, the work is still at the animal‑study stage. There’s no human dosage, safety data, or ready‑to‑use protocol, so biohackers should view this as a scientific insight rather than a current supplement or therapy.

Summary

The study shows that higher levels of the KiSS-1 gene are linked to better outcomes in a type of bladder cancer, and that giving the peptide metastin (related to kisspeptin‑10) to mice reduces tumor spread and improves survival, mainly by blocking a cell‑signaling pathway (NF‑κB) that helps cancer invade tissue.

Abstract

The KiSS-1 gene has been reported to be a metastasis suppressor gene in human melanoma. The gene product was isolated from human placenta as the ligand of GPR54, a G protein-coupled receptor, and the C-terminally amidated peptide of 54 amino acids is called metastin. The binding of metastin to GPR54 has been shown to inhibit tumor metastasis in some tumor cells; however, its function remains unclear in urothelial carcinoma. We first evaluated KiSS-1 expression and GPR54 expression in 151 patients with upper urinary tract urothelial carcinoma to determine their prognostic significance. Next, we examined the role of metastin in the invasiveness and lung metastasis of MBT-2 variant (MBT-2V), which is a highly metastatic murine bladder cancer cell. Multivariate analysis revealed that KiSS-1 expression was an independent predictor of metastasis and overall survival. However, GPR54 expression was not selected. Hematogeneous metastasis had a significantly lower level of KiSS-1 expression compared with lymph node metastasis. Metastin treatment significantly reduced the invasiveness of MBT-2V cells and inhibited the DNA-binding activity of NF-κB by blocking its nuclear translocation, leading to a reduction in the expression and activity of matrix metalloproteinase-9. Metastin treatment dramatically prevented the occurrence of lung metastatic nodules (6.3 ± 2.3, n = 15) compared with controls (30.4 ± 5.1, n = 15; P < 0.01), as well as had survival benefit. KiSS-1 plays an important role in the prognosis of upper tract urothelial carcinoma and metastin may be an effective inhibitor of metastasis in urothelial carcinoma through its blockade of NF-κB function.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2012

Date

2012-02-24T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1158/1535-7163.mct-11-0521