Central precocious puberty due to hypothalamic hamartomas correlates with anatomic features but not with expression of GnRH, TGFalpha, or KISS1.
Chan. Yee-Ming YM; Fenoglio-Simeone. Kristina A KA; Paraschos. Sophia S; Muhammad. Laura L; Troester. Matthew M MM; Ng. Yu-Tze YT; Johnsonbaugh. Roger E RE; Coons. Stephen W SW; Prenger. Erin C EC; Kerrigan. John F JF; Seminara. Stephanie B SB
Key Findings
- Hamartomas that cause early puberty are larger and contact the infundibulum or tuber cinereum
- All hamartomas expressed GnRH, TGFalpha, and GnRH receptor regardless of puberty timing
- KISS1, its receptor GPR54, and GRM1A levels did not differ between hamartomas with and without early puberty
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this research doesn’t provide a new way to use kisspeptin‑10 for health or performance. It suggests that simply boosting or blocking kisspeptin isn’t likely to affect puberty timing or related metabolic pathways, and the findings are specific to a rare brain condition rather than general adult health.
Summary
This study looked at brain growths called hypothalamic hamartomas that sometimes cause kids to go through puberty early. It found that the ones linked to early puberty are bigger and touch specific brain areas, while the levels of the kisspeptin gene (KISS1) and related proteins are the same whether puberty is early or not. So, the shape and size of the growth matter more than the kisspeptin signals.
Abstract
Hypothalamic hamartomas are the most common identifiable cause of central precocious puberty (CPP). Hamartoma characteristics proposed to be associated with CPP include specific anatomic features and expression of molecules such as gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), transforming growth factor alpha (TGFalpha), and GRM1A, which encodes the type 1 metabotropic glutamate receptor alpha isoform. We sought to determine whether hamartomas that cause CPP could be distinguished by anatomic features, expression of these molecules, or expression of KISS1, whose products signal through the receptor GPR54 to stimulate GnRH release. Clinical records and radiologic images were reviewed for 18 patients who underwent hamartoma resection for intractable seizures; 7 had precocious puberty. Resected tissue was examined for expression of GnRH, GnRH receptor (GnRHR), TGFalpha, KISS1, GPR54, and GRM1A. Hypothalamic hamartomas associated with CPP were more likely to contact the infundibulum or tuber cinereum and were larger than hamartomas not associated with CPP. GnRH, TGFalpha, and GnRHR were expressed by all hamartomas studied. Expression of KISS1, GPR54, and GRM1A did not differ significantly between hamartomas associated and not associated with CPP. Anatomic features rather than expression patterns of candidate molecules distinguish hypothalamic hamartomas that are associated with CPP from those that are not.
Study Information
pubmed
2010
2010-04-14T00:00:00.000Z
10.1159/000308162
45
30