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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 1
2010 pubmed 22 citations

KISS1 is down-regulated by 17beta-estradiol in MDA-MB-231 cells through a nonclassical mechanism and loss of ribonucleic acid polymerase II binding at the proximal promoter.

Huijbregts. Lukas L; de Roux. Nicolas N

Key Findings

  • Estrogen (E2) rapidly lowers KISS1 expression in ERα‑positive MDA‑MB‑231 breast cancer cells.
  • The down‑regulation is driven by a short 93‑bp promoter region that lacks classic estrogen response elements.
  • E2 causes loss of RNA polymerase II at the KISS1 proximal promoter, reducing active transcription without needing the receptor to bind DNA.

Practical Outcomes

  • For most biohackers, this study offers little direct guidance. It suggests that high estrogen levels could suppress kisspeptin production, but the work was done in cancer cells and used molecular mechanisms not easily translated into everyday dosing or supplementation strategies.

Summary

In a lab study using breast cancer cells, researchers found that the hormone estrogen (E2) quickly reduces the amount of the kisspeptin gene (KISS1) by pulling away the machinery that makes RNA from the gene's start site. This happens even when the estrogen receptor can't stick to DNA, showing a non‑traditional way estrogen shuts down KISS1.

Abstract

Kisspeptins are hypothalamic neuropeptides encoded by KISS1 and recently described as major regulators of GnRH release from hypothalamic neurons. Although 17beta-estradiol (E2)-induced up-regulation of KISS1 expression has been documented in anteroventral periventricular nucleus neurons, E2 down-regulates KISS1 expression in arcuate nucleus neurons via the estrogen receptor alpha by unknown molecular mechanisms. Because KISS1 was initially described as a metastasis inhibitor, notably in breast tumors, we used the MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cell line, which expresses high levels of KISS1, to characterize the molecular mechanism underlying KISS1 regulation by E2. E2 rapidly down-regulated endogenous KISS1 in a stable ERalpha-expressing MDA-MB-231 cell line. Promoter analysis revealed that E2 down-regulation was determined by a short 93-bp sequence devoid of estrogen response element and Sp1 sites. E2 down-regulation persisted with an ERalpha that was unable to bind DNA and in the presence of histone deacetylase inhibitor. In the absence of E2, unliganded ERalpha and RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) were present on the proximal promoter. E2 stimulation induced recruitment of ERalpha and loss of RNAPII at the proximal promoter. Along the gene body, total RNAPII amounts were similar in E2-treated and untreated cells, whereas the active form was significantly less abundant in E2-treated cells. Thus, E2-induced down-regulation of KISS1 is mediated by a pathway combining RNAPII loss at the proximal promoter and modulation of active RNAPII along the gene body, which is a novel mechanism in the complex process of E2-induced repression of gene expression.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2010

Date

2010-06-09T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1210/en.2010-0260

Citations

22

References

50