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
2009 pubmed

Clinical significance of plasma metastin level in pancreatic cancer patients.

Katagiri. Fumihiko F; Nagai. Kazuyuki K; Kida. Atsushi A; Tomita. Kenji K; Oishi. Shinya S; Takeyama. Masaharu M; Doi. Ryuichiro R; Fujii. Nobutaka N

Key Findings

  • Plasma metastin levels are significantly higher in pancreatic cancer patients than in healthy volunteers
  • Metastin levels do not correlate with tumor size, invasion, lymph node involvement, or distant metastasis
  • The researchers propose metastin could serve as a blood biomarker for pancreatic cancer screening

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the finding is mainly of diagnostic interest and does not provide a protocol, dosage, or lifestyle tweak. It may become part of future screening tools, but there’s no actionable step for longevity or performance right now.

Summary

The study found that people with pancreatic cancer have higher levels of a peptide called metastin (kisspeptin‑10) in their blood compared to healthy people, but the amount didn’t relate to how big or advanced the tumor was. This suggests metastin might help detect the disease, but it doesn’t tell us how to use it for health or performance.

Abstract

Metastin, which is a 54-residue peptide coded by KiSS-1 gene, is an endogenous ligand to a G-protein-coupled receptor GPR54. Metastin suppresses a malignant tumor to metastasize and regulates secretion of gonadotropine releasing hormone. Physiological action of metastin has been focused on in oncology. It is reported that less KiSS-1 gene and more hOT7T175 gene which codes GPR54 are expressed in pancreatic cancers than in normal pancreatic tissues; however, there is no study that investigates the relationship between clinicopathological characteristics and plasma metastin concentration in pancreatic cancer patients. The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between plasma metastin-like immunoreactive substance (LI) levels and clinical characteristics in pancreatic cancer patients. Thirty-three patients with pathologically confirmed pancreatic cancer before or just after treatments and 24 healthy volunteers were included in the study. Patients were grouped according to the International Union Against Cancer TNM classification. Plasma metastin-LI was measured by enzyme immunoassay. The plasma metastin-LI levels of cancer patients were significantly higher when compared with healthy volunteers. Significant relationship was not found between the plasma metastin-LI levels and the clinicopathological factors such as tumor size, invasion, lymph node metastasis and distant metastasis. The plasma metastin levels may be a significant biomarker to predict the presence of pancreatic cancer and could be used in pancreatic cancer screening.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2009