Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
2012 pubmed

The metastasis suppressor KISS1 lacks antimetastatic activity in the C8161.9 xenograft model of melanoma.

Navenot. Jean-Marc JM; Evans. Barry B; Oishi. Shinya S; Setsuda. Shohei S; Fujii. Nobutaka N; Peiper. Stephen C SC

Key Findings

  • KISS1 (kisspeptin‑10) analog gave no survival benefit compared with placebo in the melanoma mouse model.
  • Earlier positive results were traced to a defective cell clone, not to the peptide’s activity.
  • New KISS1‑expressing clones still did not reduce tumor growth or metastasis.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers and self‑experimenters, this research provides no actionable protocol for using kisspeptin‑10 to improve longevity, metabolism, or performance. The peptide does not appear to have antimetastatic effects in this model, and there’s no evidence it offers health benefits outside cancer research at this time.

Summary

A study tested a kisspeptin‑10‑based drug to stop melanoma spread in mice, but it didn’t help the animals live longer. The earlier positive results were likely due to a weird cell clone, not the drug itself. New experiments showed the drug doesn’t actually block cancer spread, so it isn’t useful for health‑boosting purposes.

Abstract

The objective of this study was to use the established xenograft model of human melanoma (C8161.9) to test a pharmacological approach to the effect of the metastasis suppressor KISS1. A KISS1 analog was used to inhibit the metastatic development of C8161.9 cells in nude mice. Further experiments were performed to test the validity of the C8161.9 model and test the connection between KISS1 expression and loss of metastatic potential. New clones of C8161.9 cells were obtained, with or without KISS1 expression, and were tested for metastasis formation. The absence of benefit in survival with the KISS1 analog compared with PBS prompted us to revisit the C8161.9 model. We found that the cells expressing KISS1, used in the previous study and obtained by transfection and single-cell cloning, were defective for both formation of orthotopic tumors and metastases. In mixing experiments, these cells could not suppress orthotopic tumor growth of KISS1-negative C8161.9 cells, suggesting that the suppression of metastasis by C8161.9-KISS1 cells may be intrinsic to the selected clone rather than related to KISS1 expression. Isolation of clones from parental C8161.9 cells in soft agar yielded cell populations that phenotypically and genotypically mimicked the KISS1-positive clone. In addition, new clones expressing KISS1 did not show any decrease in metastatic growth. These data demonstrate the heterogeneity of cell types in the C8161.9 cell line and the high risk of artifact linked to single-cell selection. A different xenograft model will be necessary to evaluate the use of KISS1 analogs as antimetastatic therapy.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2012

DOI

10.1097/cmr.0b013e328350fa07