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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 2
2009 pubmed 107 citations

The recent genetics of hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism - novel insights and new questions.

Semple. Robert K RK; Topaloglu. A Kemal AK

Key Findings

  • More than 10 genes are now linked to hypogonadotropic hypogonadism (HH).
  • Some genes cause both Kallmann syndrome (with smell loss) and normal‑smell HH, blurring clinical categories.
  • Genetic studies identified kisspeptin as a crucial trigger for GnRH release, highlighting its central role in sexual maturation.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the main takeaway is that the kisspeptin pathway is a fundamental control point for sex hormone production. This suggests that targeting kisspeptin (e.g., with kisspeptin‑10) could theoretically boost GnRH and downstream hormones, but the review provides no concrete dosing or safety data, so any experimentation would be experimental and should be approached with caution.

Summary

This review explains that many genes can cause a condition where the brain doesn’t signal the gonads properly, leading to low sex hormones. Recent genetic work showed that the peptide kisspeptin is a key trigger for releasing the hormone GnRH, which starts the whole reproductive hormone cascade. While this confirms kisspein’s importance, the paper doesn’t give any dosing or practical tips for using kisspeptin-10 in everyday health hacks.

Abstract

The complex organization and regulation of the human hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis render it susceptible to dysfunction in the face of a variety of genetic insults, leading to different degrees of hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism (HH). Although the genetic basis of some HH was recognized more than 60 years ago the first specific pathogenic defect, in the KAL1 gene, was only identified within the last 20 years. In the past decade, the rate of genetic discovery has dramatically accelerated, with defects in more than 10 genes now associated with HH. Several themes have emerged as the genetic basis of HH has gradually been uncovered, including the association of some genes such as FGFR1, FGF8, PROK2 and PROKR2, both with HH in association with hyposmia/anosmia (Kallmann syndrome) and with normosmic HH, thus blurring the clinical distinction between ontogenic and purely functional defects in the axis. Many examples of digenic inheritance of HH have also been reported, sometimes producing variable reproductive and accessory phenotypes within a family with non-Mendelian inheritance patterns. In strictly normosmic HH, human genetics has made a particularly dramatic impact in the past 6 years through homozygosity mapping in consanguineous families, first through identification of a key role for kisspeptin in triggering GnRH release, and very recently through demonstration of a critical role for neurokinin B in normal sexual maturation. This review summarises current understanding of the genetic architecture of HH, as well as its diagnostic and mechanistic implications.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2009

Date

2009-08-29T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1111/j.1365-2265.2009.03687.x

Citations

107

References

95