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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 3
2011 pubmed

Peripheral kisspeptin reverses short photoperiod-induced gonadal regression in Syrian hamsters by promoting GNRH release.

Ansel. L L; Bentsen. A H AH; Ancel. C C; Bolborea. M M; Klosen. P P; Mikkelsen. J D JD; Simonneaux. V V

Key Findings

  • Acute peripheral injection of Kp54 reactivates testicular activity and raises testosterone in short‑day hamsters
  • Chronic subcutaneous delivery via mini‑pump fails to produce the same effect
  • Kp54’s action depends on stimulating GnRH release, blocked by a GnRH‑receptor antagonist

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the study suggests that if kisspeptin were used to boost hormone levels, intermittent injections may be required rather than continuous infusion. However, the results are from hamsters and the exact dosing, safety, and effectiveness in humans remain unknown, so any protocol would be highly experimental.

Summary

Giving kisspeptin (a hormone that tells the brain to release reproductive signals) as a quick injection into the body can wake up the reproductive system in hamsters that have gone dormant because of short winter days, raising testosterone levels. However, a slow‑release method didn’t work, so timing and dosing matter. The findings hint that short, repeated doses might be needed if you ever try kisspeptin to boost hormones, but it’s still an animal study and not proven for people.

Abstract

In seasonal breeders, reproduction is synchronised by day length via the pineal hormone melatonin. In short winter days (short day, SD), the Syrian hamster displays a complete gonadal atrophy together with a marked reduction in expression of kisspeptins (Kp), a family of potent hypothalamic stimulators of GNRH neurons. Both central and peripheral acute injections of Kp have been reported to activate the gonadotropic axis in mammals. The aim of this study was to determine if and how peripheral administration of Kp54 could restore gonadal function in photo-inhibited hamsters. Testicular activity of hamsters kept in SD was reactivated by two daily i.p. injections of Kp54 but not by chronic subcutaneous delivery of the same peptide via mini-pumps. Acute i.p. injection of Kp54-induced FOS (c-Fos) expression in a large number of GNRH neurons and pituitary gonadotrophs together with a strong increase in circulating testosterone. The activation of pituitary cells by Kp was inhibited by preadministration of the GNRH receptor antagonist acyline. Altogether, our results demonstrate that peripheral Kp54 activates the gonadotropic axis by stimulating GNRH release and indicate that an appropriate protocol of long-term systemic Kp administration can recrudesce a photo-inhibited reproductive axis.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2011

Date

2011-06-13T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1530/rep-10-0313