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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 2
2007 pubmed 126 citations

Evidence for the existence of a functional Kiss1/Kiss1 receptor pathway in fish.

van Aerle. R R; Kille. P P; Lange. A A; Tyler. C R CR

Key Findings

  • Kiss1 and its receptor Kiss1r are present in zebrafish and other teleost fish.
  • Kiss1 is expressed in brain, intestine, fat tissue, and testis, while Kiss1r is mainly in the brain.
  • The short kisspeptin-10 region of the protein is highly conserved between fish and mammals.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this study mainly confirms that the kisspeptin-10 sequence is evolutionarily stable, supporting its relevance as a target for human research. It does not provide new dosing guidelines or protocols, but it reinforces the idea that kisspeptin-10 could be a viable peptide for studies on puberty, metabolism, or reproductive health across species.

Summary

Scientists found that the kisspeptin-10 part of the Kiss1 protein is conserved in fish, meaning the same short peptide sequence exists across species, and that fish have a functional Kiss1/Kiss1 receptor system similar to mammals.

Abstract

In mammals, the Kiss1 receptor (Kiss1r) and its kisspeptin ligands are key factors regulating the onset of puberty. In fish, however, the mechanisms underlying the initiation of puberty are poorly understood and the role of the Kiss1r/kisspeptin pathway in this process has not been established. In this study, a bioinformatics approach was used to identify the genes for Kiss1 and Kiss1r in five teleost genomes and the information used to clone the corresponding transcripts from zebrafish. Zebrafish kiss1r was expressed predominantly in the brain, with a minor level of expression in the eye, and zebrafish kiss1 was expressed in brain, intestine, adipose tissue and testis. Analysis of the chromosome region containing the kiss1 locus showed high synteny across vertebrate genomes. In contrast to their mammalian homologues, teleost Kiss1 protein sequences were poorly conserved with the exception of the region representing kisspeptin-10. Signal peptide sequences and likely cleavage and amidation sites in the teleost Kiss1 sequences were determined and found to be similar to those in mammalian Kiss1. This is the first report of the existence and characterization of the Kiss1 gene outside the mammalian taxa, suggesting that a functional Kiss1/Kiss1 receptor pathway is conserved across vertebrate species.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2007

Date

2007-10-25T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.peptides.2007.10.018

Citations

126

References

45