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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 1
2009 pubmed

Kisspeptin-10, a KISS1-derived decapeptide, inhibits tumor angiogenesis by suppressing Sp1-mediated VEGF expression and FAK/Rho GTPase activation.

Cho. Sung-Gook SG; Yi. Zhengfang Z; Pang. Xiufeng X; Yi. Tingfang T; Wang. Ying Y; Luo. Jian J; Wu. Zirong Z; Li. Dali D; Liu. Mingyao M

Key Findings

  • Kp‑10 blocks migration, invasion and tube formation of human endothelial cells in vitro
  • Kp‑10 reduces angiogenesis in chick membrane and mouse eye assays
  • Kp‑10 lowers tumor growth in mice by cutting VEGF production and blocking Src/FAK and Rac/Cdc42 signaling

Practical Outcomes

  • At this stage the findings are purely scientific and not translatable into a self‑administered protocol. No human dosage, safety, or delivery method is known, so biohackers should wait for further research before considering any use.

Summary

Kisspeptin‑10, a tiny protein fragment, was shown in lab experiments to stop new blood‑vessel growth that tumors need, shrinking tumor size in mice, but the work is all in cells and animals and doesn’t give any human dosing or safety info, so it isn’t ready for personal use.

Abstract

Kisspeptin-10 (Kp-10), a decapeptide derived from the primary translation product of KISS1 gene, has been reported previously to be a key hormone for puberty and an inhibitor for tumor metastasis via the activation of G protein-coupled receptor 54. However, whether Kp-10 inhibits angiogenesis, which is critical for tumor growth and metastasis and other human diseases, is still unknown. Here we show that Kp-10 significantly inhibits human umbilical vein endothelial cell (HUVEC) migration, invasion, and tube formation, key processes in angiogenesis. Using chicken chorioallantoic membrane assay and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-induced mouse corneal micropocket assay, we show that Kp-10 inhibits angiogenesis in vivo. Furthermore, Kp-10 inhibits tumor growth in severe combined immunodeficient mice xenografted with human prostate cancer cells (PC-3) through inhibiting tumor angiogenesis, whereas Kp-10 has little effect on the proliferation of HUVECs and human prostate cancer cells. In deciphering the underlying molecular mechanisms, we show that Kp-10 suppresses VEGF expression by inhibiting the binding of specificity protein 1 to VEGF promoter and by blocking the activation of c-Src/focal adhesion kinase and Rac/Cdc42 signaling pathways in HUVECs, leading to the inhibition of tumor angiogenesis.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2009

Date

2009-08-11T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1158/0008-5472.can-09-0476