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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 2
2010 pubmed 40 citations

The effects of kisspeptin-54 on blood pressure in humans and plasma kisspeptin concentrations in hypertensive diseases of pregnancy.

Nijher. Gurjinder M K GM; Chaudhri. Owais B OB; Ramachandran. Radha R; Murphy. Kevin G KG; Zac-Varghese. Sagen E K SE; Fowler. Alexis A; Chinthapalli. Krishna K; Patterson. Michael M; Thompson. Emily L EL; Williamson. Catherine C; Kumar. Sailesh S; Ghatei. Mohammad A MA; Bloom. Stephen R SR; Dhillo. Waljit S WS

Key Findings

  • Kisspeptin-54 administration had no significant effect on heart rate or blood pressure in healthy volunteers.
  • Plasma kisspeptin levels did not correlate with blood pressure in either healthy pregnant women or those with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy.
  • Women with pregnancy‑induced hypertension or pre‑eclampsia had plasma kisspeptin concentrations similar to normotensive pregnant controls.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers interested in using kisspeptin, the peptide appears neutral for blood pressure regulation, suggesting it won’t raise or lower BP at the studied dose. This provides reassurance that kisspeptin can be explored for other goals (e.g., reproductive hormone modulation) without cardiovascular side effects, but it isn’t a tool for BP control.

Summary

Giving kisspeptin-54 to healthy men and women didn't change their heart rate or blood pressure, and the amount of kisspeptin naturally circulating in pregnant women didn't predict blood pressure or differ between normal and hypertensive pregnancies.

Abstract

To investigate (i) if kisspeptin administration alters heart rate (HR) or blood pressure (BP) in healthy male and female volunteers, (ii) whether circulating plasma kisspeptin concentrations in healthy pregnant women and women with hypertensive diseases of pregnancy correlate with BP and (iii) whether women with hypertensive diseases of pregnancy have altered plasma kisspeptin concentrations. We have previously reported the effects of administration of kisspeptin-54 on gonadotrophin secretion in healthy male and female volunteers. In these studies, cardiovascular parameters were not a primary endpoint. However, data were also collected on BP and HR for 4h post administration of kisspeptin-54. Blood samples were taken from 105 women in the third trimester of pregnancy (27 women with hypertensive diseases of pregnancy and 78 controls). Samples were assayed for plasma kisspeptin immunoreactivity (IR). Administration of kisspeptin was not associated with significant changes in HR or BP in healthy men or women. There was no significant correlation between plasma kisspeptin concentration and BP in healthy pregnant women or in those with hypertensive diseases of pregnancy. No significant differences in plasma kisspeptin-IR concentrations were observed between women with hypertensive diseases of pregnancy and normotensive pregnant controls, plasma kisspeptin concentrations ±SE: controls 2878 ± 157pmol l(-1) ; pregnancy-induced hypertension 2696 ± 299pmoll(-1) (95% CI vs. controls -514, 878pmoll(-1) ); pre-eclampsia 3519 ± 357 (95% CI vs. controls -1644, 362pmoll(-1) ). Elevation of plasma kisspeptin-IR is not associated with an alteration in BP in humans.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2010

Date

2010-11-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1111/j.1365-2125.2010.03746.x

Citations

40

References

31