beta-Sheet aggregation of kisspeptin-10 is stimulated by heparin but inhibited by amphiphiles.
Nielsen. Søren B SB; Franzmann. Magnus M; Basaiawmoit. Rajiv V RV; Wimmer. Reinhard R; Mikkelsen. Jens D JD; Otzen. Daniel E DE
Key Findings
- Heparin triggers kisspeptin‑10 to form beta‑sheet rich amyloid aggregates at neutral and slightly acidic pH
- The aggregation appears after a lag phase and needs heparin to start nucleation
- Zwitterionic and anionic surfactants at sub‑micellar levels completely block the aggregation
Practical Outcomes
- For now there’s no direct way to apply this to supplementation or protocols. It suggests that kisspeptin’s tendency to aggregate can be controlled by heparin‑like molecules or surfactants, but biohackers have no actionable steps from this research.
Summary
The study shows that the short hormone kisspeptin‑10 can clump together into amyloid‑like fibers when heparin is present, but these clumps are stopped by common surfactants. This behavior is a basic science finding and doesn’t give clear guidance on how to use kisspeptin for health or performance.
Abstract
The murine 10-residue neurohormone kisspeptin (YNWNSFGLRY) is an important regulator of reproductive behavior and gonadotrophin secretion. It is known to form a random coil in solution, but undergoes a structural change in the presence of membranes although the nature of this change is not fully determined. The peptide's conformational versatility raises the question whether it is also able to form ordered aggregates under physiological conditions, which might be relevant as a storage mechanism. Here we show that heparin induces kisspeptin to form beta-sheet rich amyloid aggregates both at neutral (pH 7.0) and slightly acidic (pH 5.2) conditions. Addition of heparin leads to aggregation after a certain lag phase, irrespective of the time of addition of heparin, indicating that heparin is needed to facilitate the formation of fibrillation nuclei. Aggregation is completely inhibited by submicellar concentrations of zwitterionic and anionic surfactants. Unlike previous reports, our NMR data do not indicate persistent structure in the presence of zwitterionic surfactant micelles. Thus kisspeptin can aggregate under physiologically relevant conditions provided heparin is present, but the process is highly sensitive to the presence of amphiphiles, highlighting the very dynamic nature of the peptide conformation and suggesting that kisspeptin aggregation is a biologically regulatable process.
Study Information
pubmed
2010
2010-08-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1002/bip.21434
9
3