Kisspeptin-10, a KiSS-1/metastin-derived decapeptide, is a physiological invasion inhibitor of primary human trophoblasts.
Bilban. Martin M; Ghaffari-Tabrizi. Nassim N; Hintermann. Edith E; Bauer. Sandra S; Molzer. Sylvia S; Zoratti. Cristina C; Malli. Roland R; Sharabi. Andrew A; Hiden. Ursula U; Graier. Wolfgang W; Knöfler. Martin M; Andreae. Fritz F; Wagner. Oswald O; Quaranta. Vito V; Desoye. Gernot G
Key Findings
- Kisspeptin-10 (Kp-10) is produced by first‑trimester human trophoblasts and raises intracellular calcium levels.
- Kp-10 markedly reduces trophoblast migration and gelatin‑degrading activity in lab assays, while not altering cell proliferation.
- Both the kisspeptin ligand (KiSS‑1) and its receptor (KiSS‑1R) are more highly expressed in early‑stage placental cells than in term placenta.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers and self‑experimenters, this study offers no direct, actionable protocol or health benefit. The findings are specific to pregnancy biology and do not translate to longevity, metabolic health, or performance enhancement in the general population.
Summary
Researchers found that a tiny protein called kisspeptin-10, which is naturally made by early pregnancy cells, can slow down those cells' ability to move and invade tissue, without affecting how fast they grow. This effect seems to be linked to changes in calcium inside the cells and reduced activity of enzymes that break down surrounding material.
Abstract
Trophoblast invasion of the uterine extracellular matrix, a critical process of human implantation and essential for fetal development, is a striking example of controlled invasiveness. To identify molecules that regulate trophoblast invasion, mRNA signatures of trophoblast cells isolated from first trimester (high invasiveness) and term placentae (no/low invasiveness) were compared using U95A GeneChip microarrays yielding 220 invasion/migration-related genes. In this 'invasion cluster', KiSS-1 and its G-protein-coupled receptor KiSS-1R were expressed at higher levels in first trimester trophoblasts than at term of gestation. Receptor and ligand mRNA and protein were localized to the trophoblast compartment. In contrast to KiSS-1, which is only expressed in the villous trophoblast, KiSS-1R was also found in the extravillous trophoblast, suggesting endocrine/paracrine activation mechanisms. The primary translation product of KiSS-1 is a 145 amino acid polypeptide (Kp-145), but shorter kisspeptins (Kp) with 10, 13, 14 or 54 amino acid residues may be produced. We identified Kp-10, a dekapeptide derived from the primary translation product, in conditioned medium of first trimester human trophoblast. Kp-10, but not other kisspeptins, increased intracellular Ca(2+) levels in isolated first trimester trophoblasts. Kp-10 inhibited trophoblast migration in an explant as well as transwell assay without affecting proliferation. Suppressed motility was paralleled with suppressed gelatinolytic activity of isolated trophoblasts. These results identified Kp-10 as a novel paracrine/endocrine regulator in fine-tuning trophoblast invasion generated by the trophoblast itself.
Study Information
pubmed
2004
2004-03-15T00:00:00.000Z
10.1242/jcs.00971
362
44