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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 3
2006 pubmed 162 citations

A role for kisspeptin in islet function.

Hauge-Evans. A C AC; Richardson. C C CC; Milne. H M HM; Christie. M R MR; Persaud. S J SJ; Jones. P M PM

Key Findings

  • Both kisspeptin (KISS1) and its receptor GPR54 are present in human and mouse pancreatic islets, especially in beta and alpha cells.
  • Adding kisspeptin to isolated mouse and human islets increased insulin secretion only at high glucose (20 mmol/L), not at low glucose (2 mmol/L).
  • In the MIN6 beta‑cell line, kisspeptin reduced insulin secretion at both low and high glucose, and it did not change glucagon release from mouse islets.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the data hint that kisspeptin could be explored as a way to enhance insulin response after carbohydrate intake, potentially improving post‑meal glucose handling. However, the effects differ between whole islets and isolated cell lines, and no human dosing or safety data exist yet, so any self‑experimentation would be highly experimental and should be approached with caution.

Summary

The study shows that the hormone kisspeptin is made in the pancreas and can boost insulin release when blood sugar is high, but it doesn’t change insulin when sugar is low. In lab-grown beta cells, kisspeptin actually lowered insulin, and it didn’t affect glucagon (the hormone that raises blood sugar). This suggests kisspeptin may help fine‑tune insulin spikes after meals.

Abstract

We investigated the production of kisspeptin (KISS1) and the KISS1 receptor, GPR54, in pancreatic islets and determined the effects of exogenous kisspeptin on insulin secretion. RT-PCR and immunohistochemistry were used to detect expression of KISS1 and GPR54 mRNAs and the production of KISS1 and GPR54 in human and mouse islets and in beta (MIN6) and alpha- (alphaTC1) cell lines. The effects of KISS1 on basal and glucose-induced insulin secretion from mouse and human islets were measured in a perifusion system. KISS1 and GPR54 mRNAs were both detected in human and mouse islets, and GPR54 mRNA expression was also found in the MIN6 and alphaTC1 endocrine cell lines. In sections of mouse pancreas, KISS1 and GPR54 immunoreactivities were co-localised in both beta and alpha cells within islets, but were not detected in the exocrine pancreas. Exposure of mouse and human islets to KISS1 caused a stimulation of glucose-induced (20 mmol/l) insulin secretion, but had no effect on the basal rate of secretion at a sub-stimulatory concentration of glucose (2 mmol/l). In contrast, KISS1 inhibited insulin secretion from MIN6 cells at both 2 and 20 mmol/l glucose. KISS1 had no significant effect on glucagon secretion from mouse islets. This is the first report to show that the GPR54/KISS1 system is expressed in the endocrine pancreas, where it influences beta cell secretory function. These observations suggest an important role for this system in the normal regulation of islet function.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2006

Date

2006-07-07T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1007/s00125-006-0343-z

Citations

162

References

10