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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 2
2008 pubmed 104 citations

Kisspeptin-10 facilitates a plasma membrane-driven calcium oscillator in gonadotropin-releasing hormone-1 neurons.

Constantin. Stephanie S; Caligioni. Claudia Simone CS; Stojilkovic. Stanko S; Wray. Susan S

Key Findings

  • GnRH‑1 neurons naturally fire calcium oscillations that depend on voltage‑gated, TTX‑sensitive sodium channels.
  • Kisspeptin‑10 binding to its receptor (GPR54) boosts calcium spike frequency and can turn spikes into longer plateau bursts.
  • The effect is mediated by phospholipase C, IP3, protein kinase C, and requires both sodium channels and non‑selective cation channels.

Practical Outcomes

  • The study confirms that kisspeptin directly activates the reproductive hormone axis via a membrane calcium oscillator, but because it’s an early‑stage mouse experiment, it doesn’t provide dosing or safety guidance for human use. Biohackers should view this as mechanistic background rather than a ready‑to‑apply protocol, and await human studies before considering supplementation for fertility or hormone modulation.

Summary

Kisspeptin‑10 can kick‑start calcium waves in brain cells that control reproductive hormone release, doing so by turning on a membrane‑based oscillator that needs sodium channels and a specific signaling pathway. The work was done in mouse tissue, not humans, and shows how the peptide works at a cellular level rather than giving a ready‑to‑use protocol.

Abstract

Kisspeptins, the natural ligands of the G-protein-coupled receptor (GPR)-54, are the most potent stimulators of GnRH-1 secretion and as such are critical to reproductive function. However, the mechanism by which kisspeptins enhance calcium-regulated neuropeptide secretion is not clear. In the present study, we used GnRH-1 neurons maintained in mice nasal explants to examine the expression and signaling of GPR54. Under basal conditions, GnRH-1 cells exhibited spontaneous baseline oscillations in intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)), which were critically dependent on the operation of voltage-gated, tetrodotoxin (TTX)-sensitive sodium channels and were not coupled to calcium release from intracellular pools. Activation of native GPR54 by kisspeptin-10 initiated [Ca(2+)](i) oscillations in quiescent GnRH-1 cells, increased the frequency of calcium spiking in oscillating cells that led to summation of individual spikes into plateau-bursting type of calcium signals in a subset of active cells. These changes predominantly reflected the stimulatory effect of GPR54 activation on the plasma membrane oscillator activity via coupling of this receptor to phospholipase C signaling pathways. Both components of this pathway, inositol 1,3,4-trisphosphate and protein kinase C, contributed to the receptor-mediated modulation of baseline [Ca(2+)](i) oscillations. TTX and 2-aminoethyl diphenylborinate together abolished agonist-induced elevation in [Ca(2+)](i) in almost all cells, whereas flufenamic acid was less effective. Together these results indicate that a plasma membrane calcium oscillator is spontaneously operative in the majority of prenatal GnRH-1 neurons and is facilitated by kisspeptin-10 through phosphatidyl inositol diphosphate hydrolysis and depolarization of neurons by activating TTX-sensitive sodium channels and nonselective cationic channels.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2008

Date

2008-10-23T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1210/en.2008-0979

Citations

104

References

58