Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 3
2010 pubmed 176 citations

Neurobiological mechanisms underlying GnRH pulse generation by the hypothalamus.

Maeda. Kei-Ichiro K; Ohkura. Satoshi S; Uenoyama. Yoshihisa Y; Wakabayashi. Yoshihiro Y; Oka. Yoshitaka Y; Tsukamura. Hiroko H; Okamura. Hiroaki H

Key Findings

  • GnRH is secreted in two distinct modes: a surge for ovulation and a pulse that maintains steady LH and FSH release.
  • The pulse mode is modulated by sex steroids (estrogen/androgen) and environmental cues such as photoperiod, nutrition, and stress.
  • Kisspeptin neurons in the arcuate nucleus are proposed as the central component of the GnRH pulse‑generating mechanism.

Practical Outcomes

  • Knowing that kisspeptin controls GnRH pulses suggests that targeting kisspeptin (e.g., with kisspeptin‑10) could influence LH/FSH and downstream testosterone or estrogen levels, which may affect fertility, body composition, and metabolic health. However, the study provides no dosing or protocol details, so any experimentation should be approached cautiously and preferably under medical guidance.

Summary

The paper explains that the brain releases the hormone GnRH in two ways – a big surge for ovulation and regular pulses that keep the reproductive system running. These pulses are fine‑tuned by hormones like estrogen and by things like light, food, and stress. The authors argue that a group of brain cells that make kisspeptin, especially in the arcuate nucleus, are the main drivers of these GnRH pulses.

Abstract

Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) secretion has two modes of release in mammalian species; the surge mode and the pulse mode. The surge mode, which is required for the induction of the preovulatory gonadotropin discharge in most species, is induced by the positive feedback of estrogen secreted by the mature ovarian follicle. The pulse mode of GnRH secretion stimulates tonic luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) secretion which drives folliculogenesis, spermatogenesis and steroidogenesis and is negatively fine-tuned by estrogen or androgen. The GnRH pulse-generating mechanism is sensitive to environmental cues, such as photoperiod, nutrition and stress surge-generating mechanism is relatively emancipated from these environmental cues. The present article first provides a brief historical background to the work that led to the concept of the GnRH pulse generator: a hypothalamic network that is central to our understanding of the regulation of reproduction. We then discuss possible neurobiological mechanisms underlying GnRH pulse generation, and conclude by proposing that kisspeptin neurons in the arcuate nucleus are key players in this regard.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2010

Date

2010-10-15T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.brainres.2010.10.026

Citations

176

References

149