Biological and anatomical evidence for kisspeptin regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis of estrous horse mares.
Magee. Christianne C; Foradori. Chad D CD; Bruemmer. Jason E JE; Arreguin-Arevalo. Jesus A JA; McCue. Patrick M PM; Handa. Robert J RJ; Squires. Edward L EL; Clay. Colin M CM
Key Findings
- A dose between 1 µg and 500 µg IV kisspeptin‑10 raises LH and FSH to levels similar to a standard GnRH dose
- Kisspeptin‑immunoreactive fibers contact about 34% of GnRH‑immunoreactive neurons in the mare brain
- Even a 1 mg IV kisspeptin‑10 dose did not induce ovulation in estrous mares
Practical Outcomes
- Kisspeptin can be used to stimulate LH/FSH release, but the doses needed and the lack of ovulation effect mean it’s not a ready‑to‑use protocol for fertility or performance enhancement in humans. The findings give a rough idea of effective dose ranges in large mammals, but species differences limit direct application.
Summary
In mares, giving kisspeptin-10 through an IV can boost the hormones LH and FSH that control reproduction, but even a high dose didn’t trigger ovulation. The study also found kisspeptin cells physically connect to many GnRH cells in the brain, suggesting a direct influence.
Abstract
The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the effects of kisspeptin (KiSS) on LH and FSH secretion in the seasonally estrous mare and to examine the distribution and connectivity of GnRH and KiSS neurons in the equine preoptic area (POA) and hypothalamus. The diestrous mare has a threshold serum gonadotropin response to iv rodent KiSS decapeptide (rKP-10) administration between 1.0 and 500 microg. Administration of 500 microg and 1.0 mg rKP-10 elicited peak, mean, and area under the curve LH and FSH responses indistinguishable to that of 25 microg GnRH iv, although a single iv injection of 1.0 mg rKP-10 was insufficient to induce ovulation in the estrous mare. GnRH and KiSS-immunoreactive (ir) cells were identified in the POA and hypothalamus of the diestrous mare. In addition, KiSS-ir fibers were identified in close association with 33.7% of GnRH-ir soma, suggesting a direct action of KiSS on GnRH neurons in the mare. In conclusion, we are the first to reveal a physiological role for KiSS in the diestrous mare with direct anatomic evidence by demonstrating a threshold-like gonadotropin response to KiSS administration and characterizing KiSS and GnRH-ir in the POA and hypothalamus of the diestrous horse mare.
Study Information
pubmed
2009
2009-02-19T00:00:00.000Z
10.1210/en.2008-1698
73
63