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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

Laeverin/aminopeptidase Q, a novel bestatin-sensitive leucine aminopeptidase belonging to the M1 family of aminopeptidases.

Maruyama. Masato M; Hattori. Akira A; Goto. Yoshikuni Y; Ueda. Masamichi M; Maeda. Michiyuki M; Fujiwara. Hiroshi H; Tsujimoto. Masafumi M

Key Findings

  • Laeverin/APQ is a cell‑surface leucine aminopeptidase that prefers leucine‑based substrates.
  • It can cleave the N‑terminal amino acid of kisspeptin‑10, as well as other placental peptides.
  • Bestatin inhibits Laeverin/APQ much more effectively than other known aminopeptidase inhibitors.

Practical Outcomes

  • If you’re using kisspeptin‑10 for hormonal or performance purposes, be aware that the body’s Laeverin enzyme may degrade it, potentially reducing its effectiveness. Co‑administration of a strong aminopeptidase inhibitor like bestatin could theoretically preserve kisspeptin‑10 activity, but bestatin is not approved for routine human use and may have side effects. At present, the study mainly adds mechanistic insight rather than a ready‑to‑use protocol.

Summary

Researchers discovered that a protein called Laeverin (also known as aminopeptidase Q) can cut the kisspeptin-10 peptide, which is important for hormone signaling. This enzyme works best on leucine‑containing sequences and is strongly blocked by the drug bestatin. The finding suggests that the body can break down kisspein‑10 in the placenta, and that bestatin could be used to slow that breakdown.

Abstract

Laeverin/aminopeptidase Q (APQ) is a cell surface protein specifically expressed on human embryo-derived extravillous trophoblasts that invades the uterus during placentation. The cDNA cloning of Laeverin/APQ revealed that the sequence encodes a protein with 990 amino acid residues, and Laeverin/APQ contains the HEXXHX(18)E gluzincin motif, which is characteristic of the M1 family of aminopeptidases, although the exopeptidase motif of the family, GAMEN, is uniquely substituted for the HAMEN sequence. In this study, we expressed a recombinant human Laeverin/APQ using a baculovirus expression system, purified to homogeneity, and characterized its enzymatic properties. It was found that Laeverin/APQ had a broad substrate specificity toward synthetic substrate, although it showed a preference for Leu-4-methylcoumaryl-7-amide. Searching natural substrates, we found that Laeverin/APQ was able to cleave the N-terminal amino acid of several peptides such as angiotensin III, kisspeptin-10, and endokinin C, which are abundantly expressed in the placenta. In contrast to the case with other M1 aminopeptidases, bestatin inhibited the aminopeptidase activity of Laeverin/APQ much more effectively than other known aminopeptidase inhibitors. These results indicate that Laeverin/APQ is a novel bestatin-sensitive leucine aminopeptidase and suggest that the enzyme plays important roles in human placentation by regulating biological activity of key peptides at the embryo-maternal interface.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2007

Date

2007-05-24T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1074/jbc.m702650200