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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 2
2006 pubmed 48 citations

Mechanisms of Disease: the first kiss-a crucial role for kisspeptin-1 and its receptor, G-protein-coupled receptor 54, in puberty and reproduction.

Seminara. Stephanie B SB

Key Findings

  • Loss‑of‑function mutations in GPR54 cause hypogonadotropic hypogonadism and block puberty
  • Kisspeptin‑1 and its C‑terminal fragments (metastin) potently stimulate GnRH release in vivo
  • The kisspeptin‑GPR54 system is a central regulator of GnRH secretion during development and the menstrual cycle

Practical Outcomes

  • Knowing that kisspeptin can activate GnRH suggests it could become a target for future therapies to support reproductive health or hormone balance, but the study doesn’t provide dosing or protocol details for self‑experimentation now.

Summary

The paper explains that a protein called kisspeptin and its receptor GPR54 are key triggers for the hormone GnRH, which starts puberty and controls reproductive hormones. If the receptor doesn’t work (due to genetic mutations), puberty doesn’t happen. Giving kisspeptin fragments can strongly stimulate GnRH release, showing this pathway is a major driver of reproductive hormone signaling.

Abstract

Although the hypothalamic secretion of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) is the defining hormonal event of puberty, the physiologic mechanisms that drive secretion of GnRH at the time of sexual maturation have been difficult to identify. After puberty is initiated, the factors that modulate the frequency and amplitude of GnRH secretion in rapidly changing sex-steroid environments (i.e. the female menstrual cycle) also remain unknown. The discovery that, in both humans and mouse models, loss-of-function mutations in the gene that encodes G-protein-coupled receptor 54 result in phenotypes of hypogonadotropic hypogonadism with an absence of pubertal development has unearthed a novel pathway regulating GnRH secretion. Ligands for G-protein-coupled receptor 54 (KiSS-1R), including metastin (derived from the parent compound, kisspeptin-1) and metastin's C-terminal peptide fragments, have been shown to be powerful stimulants for GnRH release in vivo via their stimulation of G-protein-coupled receptor 54. This article reviews the discovery of the GPR54 gene, places it into the appropriate biological context, and explores the data from in vitro and in vivo studies that point to this ligand-receptor system as a major driver of GnRH secretion.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2006

Date

2006-06-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1038/ncpendmet0139

Citations

48

References

49