Evidence for two distinct KiSS genes in non-placental vertebrates that encode kisspeptins with different gonadotropin-releasing activities in fish and mammals.
Felip. Alicia A; Zanuy. Silvia S; Pineda. Rafael R; Pinilla. Leonor L; Carrillo. Manuel M; Tena-Sempere. Manuel M; Gómez. Ana A
Key Findings
- Two separate KiSS genes (KiSS‑1 and KiSS‑2) exist in non‑placental vertebrates.
- KiSS‑2 peptide is more potent than KiSS‑1 at stimulating LH and FSH release in fish.
- In rats, KiSS‑1 is more effective than KiSS‑2, and KiSS‑2 is largely absent in placental mammals, including humans.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this study confirms that the kisspeptin‑10 peptide is the relevant form for human use; the more potent KiSS‑2 variant found in fish does not exist in us. It offers no new dosing guidance or performance benefits, but reassures that current human‑focused kisspeptin research remains applicable.
Summary
Scientists discovered that fish and other non‑placental animals have two kisspeptin genes (KiSS‑1 and KiSS‑2). The KiSS‑2 peptide is a stronger trigger for reproductive hormones in fish, but it works poorly in rats and is missing from mammals like us. For humans, only the KiSS‑1 (kisspeptin‑10) version matters.
Abstract
Kisspeptins, the products of KiSS-1 gene, have recently emerged as fundamental regulators of reproductive function in different mammalian and, presumably, non-mammalian species. To date, a single form of KiSS-1 has been described in mammals, and recently, in several fish species and Xenopus. We report herein the cloning and characterization of two distinct KiSS-like genes, namely, KiSS-1 and KiSS-2, in the teleost sea bass. While KiSS-1 encodes a peptide identical to rodent kisspeptin-10, the predicted KiSS-2 decapeptide diverges at 4 amino acids (FNFNPFGLRF). Genome database searches showed that both genes are present in non-placental vertebrate genomes. Indeed, phylogenetic and genome mapping analyses suggest that KiSS-1 and KiSS-2 are paralogous genes that originated by duplication of an ancestral gene, although KiSS-2 is lost in placental mammals. KiSS-1 and KiSS-2 mRNAs are present in brain and gonads of sea bass, medaka and zebrafish. Comparative functional studies demonstrated that KiSS-2 decapeptide was significantly more potent than KiSS-1 peptide in inducing LH and FSH secretion in sea bass. In contrast, KiSS-2 decapeptide only weakly elicited LH secretion in rats, whereas KiSS-1 peptide was maximally effective. Our data are the first to provide conclusive evidence for the existence of a second KiSS gene, KiSS-2, in non-placental vertebrates, whose product is likely to play a dominant stimulatory role in the regulation of the gonadotropic axis at least in teleosts.
Study Information
pubmed
2008
2008-11-25T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.mce.2008.11.017
237
61