Kisspeptin mediates the photoperiodic control of reproduction in hamsters.
Revel. Florent G FG; Saboureau. Michel M; Masson-Pévet. Mireille M; Pévet. Paul P; Mikkelsen. Jens D JD; Simonneaux. Valérie V
Key Findings
- KiSS-1 (kisspeptin) is naturally expressed in the brain region that controls reproduction, and its levels drop in short‑day (winter‑like) conditions.
- Removing the pineal gland (which makes melatonin) blocks the seasonal drop in kisspeptin, indicating melatonin drives the change.
- Chronic administration of kisspeptin-10 restores testicular function in hamsters kept under short‑day conditions.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this research confirms that kisspeptin plays a key role in seasonal reproductive control, but the findings are limited to hamsters and involve long‑term peptide dosing under specific light conditions. While it hints that kisspeptin could influence human fertility or hormonal balance, there is no direct protocol or dosage guidance for people, so the immediate actionable value is low.
Summary
The study shows that the peptide kisspeptin-10 can jump‑start reproductive activity in hamsters that are normally suppressed by short daylight, and that this effect depends on melatonin signaling. In simple terms, giving kisspeptin-10 to these animals over time re‑activated their testes even when the environment would normally keep them inactive.
Abstract
The KiSS-1 gene encodes kisspeptin, the endogenous ligand of the G-protein-coupled receptor GPR54. Recent data indicate that the KiSS-1/GPR54 system is critical for the regulation of reproduction and is required for puberty onset. In seasonal breeders, reproduction is tightly controlled by photoperiod (i.e., day length). The Syrian hamster is a seasonal model in which reproductive activity is promoted by long summer days (LD) and inhibited by short winter days (SD). Using in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry, we show that KiSS-1 is expressed in the arcuate nucleus of LD hamsters. Importantly, the KiSS-1 mRNA level was lower in SD animals but not in SD-refractory animals, which spontaneously reactivated their sexual activity after several months in SD. These changes of expression are not secondary to the photoperiodic variations of gonadal steroids. In contrast, melatonin appears to be necessary for these seasonal changes because pineal-gland ablation prevented the SD-induced downregulation of KiSS-1 expression. Remarkably, a chronic administration of kisspeptin-10 restored the testicular activity of SD hamsters despite persisting photoinhibitory conditions. Overall, these findings are consistent with a role of KiSS-1/GPR54 in the seasonal control of reproduction. We propose that photoperiod, via melatonin, modulates KiSS-1 signaling to drive the reproductive axis.
Study Information
pubmed
2006
2006-09-05T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.cub.2006.07.025
278
47