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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
2009 pubmed 40 citations

Placenta-derived fetal specific mRNA is more readily detectable in maternal plasma than in whole blood.

Heung. Macy M S MM; Jin. Shengnan S; Tsui. Nancy B Y NB; Ding. Chunming C; Leung. Tak Y TY; Lau. Tze K TK; Chiu. Rossa W K RW; Lo. Y M Dennis YM

Key Findings

  • Placental mRNA, including KISS1, is more reliably detected in maternal plasma than in whole blood
  • Many placental transcripts detected in whole blood are of maternal origin, likely from background transcription
  • Pregnant whole blood shows increased neutrophil-related gene activity, but these changes are not pregnancy‑specific

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers interested in kisspeptin‑10 for performance or longevity, this paper offers no actionable guidance. It simply confirms that the study’s findings are about prenatal diagnostics, not about supplementing or optimizing kisspeptin use.

Summary

This study looked at how well pieces of placental genetic material (including the KISS1 gene that makes kisspeptin) can be found in a pregnant woman's blood versus her plasma. It found that plasma is better for detecting fetal RNA, while most of the placental RNA found in whole blood actually comes from the mother, not the fetus. The research is about prenatal testing, not about using kisspeptin as a health supplement.

Abstract

Placental mRNA was detected in maternal whole blood, raising the possibility of using maternal blood for noninvasive prenatal diagnosis. We investigated fetal mRNA detection in maternal whole blood and determined if it offered advantages over maternal plasma analysis. The concentrations of placental expressed genes, CSH1, KISS1, PLAC4 and PLAC1 in plasma and whole blood from healthy pregnant and non-pregnant individuals were compared by real-time quantitative reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction analysis. Their fetal specificity was investigated by comparing the transcript concentrations in pre- and post-delivery samples and through SNP genotyping by matrix-assisted laser-desorption and ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry. The gene expression profiles of pregnant and non-pregnant whole blood were investigated by microarray analysis. Upregulated genes in pregnant whole blood were selected for further quantitative analysis. The concentrations of the four transcripts were significantly higher in third trimester maternal whole blood than corresponding plasma without significant correlations. KISS1, PLAC4 and PLAC1 were detected in non-pregnant whole blood but not plasma. The transcripts remained detectable in some postpartum whole blood samples. The PLAC4 mRNA in maternal plasma showed fetal genotype while that in corresponding whole blood indicated both fetal and maternal contributions. Microarray analysis revealed upregulation of genes involved in neutrophil functions in pregnant whole blood including DEFA4, CEACAM8, OLFM4, ORM1, MMP8 and MPO. Though possibly pregnancy-related, they were not pregnancy-specific as suggested by the lack of post-delivery reduction in concentrations. Maternal plasma is preferred over maternal whole blood for placenta-derived fetal RNA detection. Most studied 'placental' mRNA molecules in maternal whole blood were of maternal origin and might be derived from processes such as 'illegitimate transcription'.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2009

Date

2009-06-10T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0005858

Citations

40

References

45