Metastin stimulates aldosterone synthesis in human adrenal cells.
Nakamura. Yasuhiro Y; Aoki. Satoshi S; Xing. Yewei Y; Sasano. Hironobu H; Rainey. William E WE
Key Findings
- Metastin (kisspeptin) boosts aldosterone output about 2‑fold in adrenal cells
- Fetal adrenal glands have 50‑times more the kisspeptin receptor (GPR54) than adult glands
- Metastin enhances aldosterone production even when angiotensin II is present, without changing the enzyme that makes aldosterone
Practical Outcomes
- For now, there’s no clear way to use kisspeptin to improve health or performance, as the effect is seen only in lab settings and the peptide isn’t readily available as a supplement. Biohackers should treat this as a mechanistic insight rather than a protocol to follow.
Summary
The study shows that the peptide kisspeptin (metastin) can double aldosterone production in human adrenal cells in lab experiments, especially at higher concentrations, but this was only observed in cell cultures and fetal tissue, not in real people.
Abstract
Kisspeptins, including metastin, are encoded by the KiSS-1 gene and play an important role in regulating the hypothalamic gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) system via G protein-coupled receptor 54 (GPR54, also called KiSS-1R). Normally, metastin (also called Kp-54) levels are quite low, except during pregnancy, when levels increase 1000-fold over those found in men and nonpregnant women. However, the potential hormonal role of metastin in the fetal and maternal circulation is unknown. In this study, the authors examine the levels of GPR54 mRNA expression in human adult and fetal adrenals using quantitative real-time reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). In addition, they examine the effects of metastin on steroidogenesis and steroidogenic enzyme mRNA levels in fetal adrenal cells and in the H295R adrenocortical cell line using enzyme immunoassay and RT-PCR techniques. The authors demonstrate that GPR54 mRNA is significantly higher (50-fold) in human fetal adrenals than in adult adrenals. Immunohistochemical studies have demonstrated that the GPR54 protein is predominantly expressed in the neocortex of human fetal adrenals in the third trimester. Metastin increases aldosterone production (approximately 2-fold) in both fetal neocortex adrenal cells and H295R adrenal cells, with a maximal increase seen at 100 nM. In addition, metastin increased angiotensin II (Ang II)-stimulated aldosterone production by approximately 1.5-fold. Metastin also increased the ability of the H295R cells to metabolize exogenously added pregnenolone to aldosterone but had no effect on the expression of aldosterone synthase (CYP11B2). These results suggest that the high fetal/maternal levels of metastin seen during pregnancy may affect adrenal production of aldosterone.
Study Information
pubmed
2007
2007-12-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1177/1933719107307823
33
32