Dramatic elevation of plasma metastin concentrations in human pregnancy: metastin as a novel placenta-derived hormone in humans.
Horikoshi. Yasuko Y; Matsumoto. Hirokazu H; Takatsu. Yoshihiro Y; Ohtaki. Tetsuya T; Kitada. Chieko C; Usuki. Satoshi S; Fujino. Masahiko M
Key Findings
- Baseline plasma metastin is ~1.3 fmol/ml in non‑pregnant men and women
- Metastin levels rise to ~1,200 fmol/ml in the first trimester, ~4,600 fmol/ml in the second, and ~9,600 fmol/ml in the third trimester
- After delivery, metastin returns to near‑baseline levels, confirming the placenta as its primary source
Practical Outcomes
- For most health‑optimizing protocols, this study offers little direct action. It mainly informs that kisspeptin is a pregnancy‑specific hormone, so supplementing it for longevity or performance isn’t supported by this data.
Summary
Researchers found that the peptide kisspeptin-10, also called metastin, is barely detectable in non‑pregnant people but shoots up thousands‑fold in a woman's blood during pregnancy, coming mainly from the placenta, and then drops back after birth.
Abstract
Metastin is a novel peptide that was recently isolated from human placenta as the endogenous ligand of an orphan heptahelical receptor, hOT7T175. Metastin has been shown to suppress the motility of hOT7T175-transfected melanoma cells; however, studies of the physiological function of metastin have begun only recently. To investigate the possibility that metastin is an endocrine peptide, we determined the immunoreactive (ir-) metastin concentration in human plasma using our newly developed, sensitive, and specific two-site enzyme immunoassay. The plasma concentrations of ir-metastin in males and females were 1.30 +/- 0.14 (n = 12) and 1.31 +/- 0.37 fmol/ml (n = 10), respectively. As metastin is known to be abundant in human placenta, the ir-metastin concentration in the maternal plasma was then determined. The ir-metastin concentrations were 1230 +/- 346 fmol/ml (n = 11) in the first trimester, 4590 +/- 555 (n = 16) in the second trimester, and 9590 +/- 1640 (n = 12) in the third trimester. On d 5 after delivery, the ir-metastin concentration returned to nearly the nonpregnant level (7.63 +/- 1.33 fmol/ml; n = 10), suggesting that ir-metastin increases in pregnancy and is derived mainly from the placenta. The plasma from both nonpregnant and pregnant women showed a single ir-metastin peak at the same retention time as authentic metastin on reverse phase HPLC analysis, indicating that the major portion of the circulating metastin, as determined by our two-site enzyme immunoassay, represents endogenous metastin. Histochemical studies of human placenta localized metastin mRNA and immunoreactivity to the syncytiotrophoblasts. The present study provides evidence for metastin as a novel placenta-derived hormone in humans.
Study Information
pubmed
2003
10.1210/jc.2002-021235