Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 2
2006 pubmed

Comparative analysis of the effects of ghrelin and unacylated ghrelin on luteinizing hormone secretion in male rats.

Martini. A C AC; Fernández-Fernández. R R; Tovar. S S; Navarro. V M VM; Vigo. E E; Vazquez. M J MJ; Davies. J S JS; Thompson. N M NM; Aguilar. E E; Pinilla. L L; Wells. T T; Dieguez. C C; Tena-Sempere. M M

Key Findings

  • Daily ghrelin or UAG treatment during puberty reduces LH levels and slightly delays sexual maturation in male rats.
  • Chronic ghrelin or UAG administration in adult males lowers circulating LH and FSH without changing growth hormone (GH) secretion for UAG.
  • Both ghrelin and UAG blunt the LH response to an acute kisspeptin‑10 challenge, indicating they can suppress stimulated LH release.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the study suggests that raising ghrelin (e.g., through fasting or ghrelin‑mimetic supplements) could unintentionally lower testosterone‑related hormones. Conversely, strategies that block ghrelin signaling might help maintain or boost LH/FSH levels, potentially supporting male reproductive health. However, the data are from rats, so human effects are uncertain and more research is needed before applying these insights.

Summary

In male rats, both the normal form of ghrelin and its “inactive” version (UAG) lower the hormone LH, which is important for testosterone production. This suppression happens during puberty and in adult rats, and it also reduces the LH boost normally caused by kisspeptin‑10. The effect on LH does not seem to involve the usual ghrelin receptor for growth hormone, and UAG does not affect growth hormone levels.

Abstract

Ghrelin, the endogenous ligand of GH secretagogue receptor type 1a, has emerged as pleiotropic modulator of diverse biological functions, including energy homeostasis and, recently, reproduction. Although inhibitory actions of ghrelin on LH secretion and puberty onset have been reported previously, the receptor mechanisms mediating these actions, and the potential gonadotropic effects of the unacylated isoform of ghrelin (UAG), remain unclear. In this work, the effects of single and repeated administration of ghrelin or UAG on LH secretion were compared in pubertal and adult male rats. In addition, the effects of ghrelin were assessed in models of transient or persistent hypergonadotropism. Daily injection of ghrelin or UAG throughout puberty similarly decreased LH levels and partially delayed balanopreputial separation. Likewise, chronic infusion of ghrelin or UAG to adult males resulted in significant decreases in circulating LH and FSH concentrations. Moreover, acute injection of ghrelin induced a transient reduction in LH levels in freely moving males, an effect that was fully mimicked by administration of UAG. Yet in contrast to ghrelin, UAG failed to modify GH secretion. Finally, injection of ghrelin moderately, but significantly, reduced the duration of LH secretory responses to the potent gonadotropin secretagogue kisspeptin-10, whereas ghrelin infusion in a model of chronic elevation of serum gonadotropin levels (the transgenic growth retarded male rat) evoked a significant reduction of LH concentrations. Altogether our present results further substantiate the inhibitory effect of ghrelin on basal and stimulated LH secretion in a wide array of experimental conditions. Moreover, our data are the first to demonstrate the ability of UAG, originally considered an inert form of the molecule, to mimic the actions of acylated ghrelin on LH release. These observations reinforce the contention that ghrelin, as putative signal for energy insufficiency, may operate as negative modifier of male puberty and LH secretion, an effect that might be, at least partially, conducted through a GH secretagogue receptor type 1a-independent mechanism.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2006

Date

2006-02-02T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1210/en.2005-1422