Hypertrophy and increased kisspeptin gene expression in the hypothalamic infundibular nucleus of postmenopausal women and ovariectomized monkeys.
Rometo. Adonna M AM; Krajewski. Sally J SJ; Voytko. Mary Lou ML; Rance. Naomi E NE
Key Findings
- Postmenopausal women have larger kisspeptin‑producing neurons and higher KiSS‑1 gene activity in the hypothalamus.
- Ovariectomized monkeys show the same neuronal growth and gene increase, confirming it’s due to loss of ovarian hormones.
- Estrogen replacement in ovariectomized monkeys sharply reduces kisspeptin neuron size and KiSS‑1 expression.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the takeaway is that kisspeptin activity rises when estrogen is low, suggesting it could be a marker or target for managing hormonal balance during menopause. However, the study provides no direct dosing or protocol guidance for using kisspeptin‑10 or related compounds.
Summary
The study found that after menopause (or after removing ovaries in monkeys), certain brain cells that make kisspeptin get bigger and produce more of the gene, and giving estrogen back shrinks this effect. This shows kisspeptin is linked to how the body senses low estrogen, but the research didn’t test any treatments or dosing.
Abstract
Human menopause is characterized by ovarian failure, gonadotropin hypersecretion, and neuronal hypertrophy in the hypothalamic infundibular (arcuate) nucleus. Recent studies have demonstrated a critical role for kisspeptins in reproductive regulation, but it is not known whether menopause is accompanied by changes in hypothalamic kisspeptin neurons. Our objective was to map the location of neurons expressing kisspeptin gene (KiSS-1) transcripts in the human hypothalamus and determine whether menopause is associated with changes in the size and gene expression of kisspeptin neurons. In monkeys, our objective was to evaluate the effects of ovariectomy and hormone replacement on neurons expressing KiSS-1 mRNA in the infundibular nucleus. Hypothalamic tissues were collected at autopsy from eight premenopausal and nine postmenopausal women and from 42 young cynomolgus monkeys in various endocrine states. We used hybridization histochemistry, quantitative autoradiography, and computer-assisted microscopy. Examination of human hypothalamic sections revealed that KiSS-1 neurons were located predominantly in the infundibular nucleus. In the infundibular nucleus of postmenopausal women, there was a significant increase in the size of neurons expressing KiSS-1 mRNA and the number of labeled cells and autoradiographic grains per neuron. Similar to postmenopausal women, ovariectomy induced neuronal hypertrophy and increased KiSS-1 gene expression in the monkey infundibular nucleus. Conversely, in ovariectomized monkeys, estrogen replacement markedly reduced KiSS-1 gene expression. The cynomolgus monkey experiments provide strong evidence that the increase in KiSS-1 neuronal size and gene expression in postmenopausal women is secondary to ovarian failure. These studies suggest that kisspeptin neurons regulate estrogen negative feedback in the human.
Study Information
pubmed
2007
2007-05-08T00:00:00.000Z
10.1210/jc.2007-0553