Hypothesis: kisspeptin mediates male hypogonadism in obesity and type 2 diabetes.
George. Jyothis T JT; Millar. Robert P RP; Anderson. Richard A RA
Key Findings
- Obese and diabetic men often have low testosterone because their brain releases less GnRH, which lowers downstream hormones.
- Kisspeptin is a key driver of GnRH release, and genetic changes in its receptor can cause hormone problems.
- The authors suggest that reduced kisspeptin could be the common pathway tying high blood sugar, inflammation, leptin, and estrogen changes to low testosterone.
Practical Outcomes
- At this stage the idea is only theoretical, so there’s no actionable protocol or dosage to try. It highlights kisspeptin as a potential future target for research or therapy, but biohackers should wait for experimental data before experimenting.
Summary
The paper proposes that a hormone called kisspeptin might be the missing link causing low testosterone in overweight men with type‑2 diabetes, but it’s just a hypothesis and doesn’t give any concrete ways to use kisspeptin right now.
Abstract
Hypogonadism occurs commonly in men with type 2 diabetes (T2DM) and severe obesity. Current evidence points to a decreased secretion of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) from the hypothalamus and thereby decreased secretion of gonadotropins from the pituitary gland as a central feature of the pathophysiology in these men. Hyperglycaemia, inflammation, leptin and oestrogen-related feedback have been proposed to make aetiological contributions to the hypogonadotropic hypogonadism of T2DM. However, the neuroendocrine signals that link these factors with modulation of GnRH neurons have yet to be identified. Kisspeptins play a central role in the modulation of GnRH secretion and, thus, downstream regulation of gonadotropins and testosterone secretion in men. Inactivating mutations of the kisspeptin receptor have been shown to cause hypogonadotropic hypogonadism in man, whilst an activating mutation is associated with precocious puberty. Data from studies in experimental animals link kisspeptin expression with individual factors known to regulate GnRH secretion, including hyperglycaemia, inflammation, leptin and oestrogen. We therefore hypothesise that decreased endogenous kisspeptin secretion is the common central pathway that links metabolic and endocrine factors in the pathology of testosterone deficiency seen in men with obesity and T2DM. We propose that the kisspeptin system plays a central role in integrating a range of metabolic inputs, thus constituting the link between energy status with the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis, and put forward potential clinical studies to test the hypothesis.
Study Information
pubmed
2010
2010-06-10T00:00:00.000Z
10.1159/000299767
107
52