Structural and functional multiplicity of the kisspeptin/GPR54 system in goldfish (Carassius auratus).
Li. Shuisheng S; Zhang. Yong Y; Liu. Yun Y; Huang. Xigui X; Huang. Weiren W; Lu. Danqi D; Zhu. Pei P; Shi. Yu Y; Cheng. Christopher H K CH; Liu. Xiaochun X; Lin. Haoran H
Key Findings
- Goldfish have two distinct kisspeptin genes (kiss1 and kiss2) with different tissue distribution
- Both kisspeptin-10 peptides can activate goldfish GPR54 receptors in cell assays, but with different strengths
- Injecting gfKiss1-10 raises serum LH in female goldfish, while gfKiss2-10 shows little to no effect
Practical Outcomes
- The study shows kisspeptin can influence reproductive hormones in fish, but it offers no actionable protocol, dosage, or safety data for humans. Biohackers should treat this as basic science with limited direct relevance to human longevity or performance.
Summary
Researchers studied two kisspeptin peptides in goldfish and found that one of them (gfKiss1-10) can raise a reproductive hormone (LH) when injected into mature females, but it doesn’t work directly on the pituitary cells. The other peptide (gfKiss2-10) was much weaker and showed no clear effect. These findings are specific to fish and don’t give clear guidance for human use.
Abstract
To ascertain the neuroendocrine function of the kisspeptin/GPR54 system in non-mammalian species, full-length cDNAs encoding for Kiss1 and Kiss2 as well as their putative cognate receptors GPR54a and GPR54b, were isolated from goldfish (Carassius auratus). The deduced protein sequences between Kiss1 and Kiss2 in goldfish share very low similarity, but their putative mature peptides (kisspeptin-10) are relatively conserved. RT-PCR analysis demonstrated that the goldfish kiss1 gene (gfkiss1) is highly expressed in the optic tectum-thalamus, intestine, kidney, and testis, while the goldfish kiss2 gene (gfkiss2) is mainly detected in the hypothalamus, telencephalon, optic tectum thalamus, adipose tissue, kidney, heart, and gonads. The two receptor genes (gfgpr54a and gfgpr54b) are highly expressed in the brain regions including telencephalon, optic tectum thalamus, and hypothalamus. Both mature goldfish kisspeptin-10 peptides (gfKiss1-10 and gfKiss2-10) are biologically active as they could functionally interact with the two goldfish receptors expressed in cultured eukaryotic cells to trigger the downstream signaling pathways with different potencies. The actions of gfKiss1-10 and gfKiss2-10 on LH secretion were further investigated in vitro and in vivo. Intraperitoneal administration of gfKiss1-10 to sexually mature female goldfish could increase the serum LH levels. However, this peptide does not significantly influence LH release from goldfish pituitary cells in primary culture, indicating that the peptide does not exert its actions at the pituitary level. On the other hand, gfKiss2-10 appears to be a much less potent peptide as it exhibits no significant in vivo bioactivity and is also inactive on the primary pituitary cells.
Study Information
pubmed
2009
2009-03-20T00:00:00.000Z
10.1677/joe-09-0016