Insight into the serum kisspeptin levels in infertile males.
Ramzan. Muhammad Haris MH; Ramzan. Muhammad M; Ramzan. Faiqah F; Wahab. Fazal F; Jelani. Musharraf M; Khan. Muhammad Aslam MA; Shah. Mohsin M
Key Findings
- Serum kisspeptin levels were markedly reduced in all infertile groups versus fertile controls.
- Infertile men also showed lower luteinizing hormone (LH) and testosterone levels across the board.
- Follicle‑stimulating hormone (FSH) was significantly lower only in normozoospermic and azoospermic infertile men.
Practical Outcomes
- For self‑experimenters, the data suggest that kisspeptin may be a useful biomarker of male reproductive health, but the study does not test any supplementation or lifestyle changes to raise kisspeptin. Until intervention studies are available, the practical takeaway is limited to monitoring hormone panels rather than implementing a new protocol.
Summary
The study measured blood levels of the hormone-like peptide kisspeptin in 176 men and found that men with any type of infertility had significantly lower kisspeptin compared to fertile men. Lower kisspeptin went hand‑in‑hand with lower LH and testosterone, while FSH was only lower in some sub‑groups.
Abstract
Regulation of reproduction is now considered to be carried out by the kisspeptin and its receptor, GPR54 or Kiss1r. Mutations of either Kiss1 or Kiss1r in humans and mice result in profound hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. The present study was aimed to determine whether the levels of kisspeptin are associated with male infertility. The study involved 176 male subjects aged 18 - 50 years including 26 fertile and 150 infertile. Infertile subjects were further subdivided according to WHO guidelines of semen analysis into 22 asthenozoospermia, 08 asthenoteratozoospermia, 18 azoospermia, 58 normozoospermia, 06 oligozoospermia, 12 oligoasthenozoospermia and 26 oligoasthenoteratozoospermia. Thorough clinical examinations excluded those suffering from chronic health problems. Serum kisspeptin levels were measured by enzyme immunoassay (EIA) and follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH) and testosterone were estimated by chemiluminescence assay (CLIA). The results of the present study have revealed that kisspeptin levels were significantly lower in all infertile males as compared to the fertile males. Significantly low LH and testosterone levels were observed in all infertile groups as compared to fertile group. FSH levels were significantly lower in normozoospermic and azoospermic as compared to fertile males, while no significant difference was observed between the other infertile and fertile group. The study revealed that serum kisspeptin levels were observed significantly lower in the infertile as compared to fertile males, indicating that the kisspeptin might be associated with the fertility problems in males.
Study Information
pubmed
2015