Molecular evolution of multiple forms of kisspeptins and GPR54 receptors in vertebrates.
Lee. Yeo Reum YR; Tsunekawa. Kenta K; Moon. Mi Jin MJ; Um. Haet Nim HN; Hwang. Jong-Ik JI; Osugi. Tomohiro T; Otaki. Naohito N; Sunakawa. Yuya Y; Kim. Kyungjin K; Vaudry. Hubert H; Kwon. Hyuk Bang HB; Seong. Jae Young JY; Tsutsui. Kazuyoshi K
Key Findings
- Fish have two kisspeptin genes (KiSS-1 and KiSS-2) and two GPR54 receptors; frogs have even more variants
- The first mature KiSS-2 peptide was identified in a vertebrate brain
- Synthetic KiSS-1 and KiSS-2 peptides activate GPR54 receptors with different strengths, showing ligand selectivity
Practical Outcomes
- The study is mainly evolutionary and doesn’t provide dosage or protocol guidance for humans. For biohackers, it confirms that kisspeptin biology is complex and species‑specific, so any self‑experimentation should rely on human‑focused research rather than these animal findings.
Summary
Scientists mapped how kisspeptin proteins and their GPR54 receptors have changed across animals like fish and frogs, finding several different versions that work differently in the brain. This helps us understand the basic biology but doesn’t give any direct tips for using kisspeptin in humans.
Abstract
Kisspeptin and its receptor GPR54 play important roles in mammalian reproduction and cancer metastasis. Because the KiSS and GPR54 genes have been identified in a limited number of vertebrate species, mainly in mammals, the evolutionary history of these genes is poorly understood. In the present study, we have cloned multiple forms of kisspeptin and GPR54 cDNAs from a variety of vertebrate species. We found that fish have two forms of kisspeptin genes, KiSS-1 and KiSS-2, whereas Xenopus possesses three forms of kisspeptin genes, KiSS-1a, KiSS-1b, and KiSS-2. The nonmammalian KiSS-1 gene was found to be the ortholog of the mammalian KiSS-1 gene, whereas the KiSS-2 gene is a novel form, encoding a C-terminally amidated dodecapeptide in the Xenopus brain. This study is the first to identify a mature form of KiSS-2 product in the brain of any vertebrate. Likewise, fish possess two receptors, GPR54-1 and GPR54-2, whereas Xenopus carry three receptors, GPR54-1a, GPR54-1b, and GPR54-2. Sequence identity and genome synteny analyses indicate that Xenopus GPR54-1a is a human GPR54 ortholog, whereas Xenopus GPR54-1b is a fish GPR54-1 ortholog. Both kisspeptins and GPR54s were abundantly expressed in the Xenopus brain, notably in the hypothalamus, suggesting that these ligand-receptor pairs have neuroendocrine and neuromodulatory roles. Synthetic KiSS-1 and KiSS-2 peptides activated GPR54s expressed in CV-1 cells with different potencies, indicating differential ligand selectivity. These data shed new light on the molecular evolution of the kisspeptin-GPR54 system in vertebrates.
Study Information
pubmed
2009
2009-01-22T00:00:00.000Z
10.1210/en.2008-1679
237
28