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 1
2003 pubmed

KISS1 metastasis suppression and emergent pathways.

Harms. John F JF; Welch. Danny R DR; Miele. Mary E ME

Key Findings

  • KISS1 gene suppresses metastasis in melanoma and breast cancer models
  • Kisspeptin-54 binds to the GPR54 receptor and may affect NF‑kB and MAP kinase pathways
  • Loss of KISS1 or its receptor is linked to worse tumor progression in humans

Practical Outcomes

  • At this stage there are no actionable protocols, dosages, or supplements for biohackers. The findings are interesting for future drug development but not ready for personal use.

Summary

The study shows that a protein called KISS1, and a piece of it called kisspeptin, can help stop cancer from spreading, but the exact way it works is still unclear and it’s mainly basic research, not something you can use right now for health hacks.

Abstract

Metastatic disease is the most critical impediment to cancer patient survival. However, comparatively little is known concerning the intricate pathways which govern the complex phenotypes associated with metastasis. The KISS1 metastasis suppressor gene inhibits metastasis in both in vivo melanoma and breast carcinoma models. Despite its clear physiological activity, the mechanism of KISS1 remains unclear. Recent identification of a 54 amino acid peptide of KISS1, termed metastin or kisspeptin-54, and its cognate G-protein coupled receptor (hOT7T175, AXOR12, GPR54) have provided additional clues and avenues of research. While studies have attributed KISS1 with modulation of NFkappaB regulation, experiments with metastin and its receptor implicate MAP kinase pathways and also suggest the potential of autocrine, paracrine and endocrine roles. Impacts on motility, chemotaxis, adhesion and invasion have each been documented in disparate cell lines and conflicting observations require resolution. Nevertheless, mounting clinical evidence, particularly the loss of KISS1 in metastases, correlates KISS1 and metastin receptor expression with human tumor progression. Together, the data substantiate roles for these molecules in metastasis regulation.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2003

DOI

10.1023/a:1022530100931