Nuclear magnetic resonance and circular dichroism study of metastin (Kisspeptin-54) structure in solution.
Shin. Ronald R; Welch. Danny R DR; Mishra. Vinod K VK; Nash. Kevin T KT; Hurst. Douglas R DR; Rama Krishna. N N
Key Findings
- Kisspeptin‑54 is largely unstructured (disordered) in solution
- A slight increase in helical content occurs in detergent micelles (about 10% helical)
- Despite lacking a stable structure, the peptide remains biologically active
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this means kisspeptin‑based supplements don’t need special formulation to force a specific shape; they can be used in standard aqueous or oral formats. However, the paper doesn’t provide dosing guidance or new performance benefits, so it offers limited direct protocol changes.
Summary
The study shows that the kisspeptin‑54 peptide, which is linked to puberty and cancer‑spread suppression, doesn’t have a fixed shape in water or even in membrane‑like environments, but it still works biologically. Its flexible, mostly disordered structure might let it bind many different targets.
Abstract
KISS1 was first discovered as a metastasis suppressor, but also plays crucial roles in the onset of puberty. The KISS1 gene encodes a secreted protein of 145 amino acids that exhibits no sequence similarity with any known proteins. KISS1 protein is proteolytically processed to generate a number of so-called kisspeptins (KP), the most well characterized is known as KP-54 or metastin. KP-54 is carboxy-terminally amidated and binds to and activates the KISS1 receptor (KISS1R). The current studies were undertaken in order to determine structure of KP-54 using nuclear magnetic resonance and circular dichroism. KP-54 is mostly disordered both in water and in trifluoroethanol/water mixed solvent, with no structural motifs. In sodium dodecyl sulfate micelles, KP-54 remains mostly disordered except for a small increase in helical propensity (from 3.7% in water to 9.9% in micelles). Despite this apparent lack of structure, KP-54 is biologically active. The intrinsic disorder of KP-54 may confer advantages in its ability to recognize and bind a wide range of target proteins.
Study Information
pubmed
2009
2009-03-24T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s10585-009-9252-0
3
30