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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 1
2006 pubmed

Postnatal development of kisspeptin neurons in mouse hypothalamus; sexual dimorphism and projections to gonadotropin-releasing hormone neurons.

Clarkson. Jenny J; Herbison. Allan E AE

Key Findings

  • Three distinct kisspeptin neuron populations were identified in the mouse hypothalamus (AVPV/PeN, dorsomedial hypothalamus, arcuate nucleus).
  • A strong female‑dominant, ~10‑fold higher number of kisspeptin neurons exists in the AVPV/PeN region, but not in the other areas.
  • Kisspeptin neurons in the AVPV/PeN emerge after post‑natal day 10, increase from day 25, and reach adult levels by puberty, forming contacts with GnRH neurons.

Practical Outcomes

  • The study mainly deepens basic knowledge of how puberty is triggered in mice and highlights a sex‑specific brain circuit. For biohackers, it does not provide actionable dosing or protocol guidance, but it underscores that kisspeptin’s role is tied to reproductive timing rather than direct metabolic or performance benefits.

Summary

Scientists mapped where kisspeptin cells live in mouse brains and how they grow after birth. They found three groups of these cells, with a lot more in a specific brain area of females. The cells appear around the time of puberty and connect to the hormone‑releasing cells that control reproduction.

Abstract

The neuropeptide kisspeptin has recently been implicated as having a critical role in the activation of the GnRH neurons to bring about puberty. We examined here the postnatal development of kisspeptin neuronal populations and their projections to GnRH neurons in the mouse. Three populations of kisspeptin neurons located in the 1) anteroventral periventricular nucleus (AVPV) and the preoptic periventricular nucleus (PeN), 2) dorsomedial hypothalamus, and 3) arcuate nucleus were identified using an antisera raised against mouse kisspeptin-10. A marked 10-fold (P<0.01), female-dominant sex difference in the numbers of kisspeptin neurons existed in the AVPV/PeN but not elsewhere. Kisspeptin neurons in the AVPV/PeN of both sexes displayed a similar pattern of postnatal development with no cells detected at postnatal day (P) 10, followed by increases from P25 to reach adult levels by puberty onset (P<0.01; P31 females and P45 males). This pattern was not found in the dorsomedial hypothalamus or arcuate nucleus. Dual immunofluorescence experiments demonstrated close appositions between kisspeptin fibers and GnRH neuron cell bodies that were first apparent at P25 and increased across postnatal development in both sexes. These studies demonstrate kisspeptin peptide expression in the mouse hypothalamus and reveal the postnatal development of a sexually dimorphic continuum of kisspeptin neurons within the AVPV and PeN. This periventricular population of kisspeptin neurons reaches adult-like proportions at the time of puberty onset and is the likely source of the kisspeptin inputs to GnRH neurons.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2006

Date

2006-09-07T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1210/en.2006-0787