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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 2
2005 pubmed

Cancer metastasis-suppressing peptide metastin upregulates excitatory synaptic transmission in hippocampal dentate granule cells.

Arai. Amy C AC; Xia. Yan-Fang YF; Suzuki. Erika E; Kessler. Markus M; Civelli. Olivier O; Nothacker. Hans-Peter HP

Key Findings

  • Kisspeptin-10 activates GPR54 receptors in dentate granule cells and increases the size of excitatory postsynaptic currents.
  • The enhancement is postsynaptic, depends on calcium signaling, and requires MAP kinase (ERK1/2) activity.
  • Blocking MAP kinases, calcium/calmodulin-dependent kinases, or tyrosine kinases stops the effect.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the main takeaway is that kisspeptin-10 can influence hippocampal excitability, hinting at a possible route to affect memory or cognitive function. However, the research is limited to animal brain tissue and does not provide dosing, safety, or human efficacy data, so it is not yet ready for direct self‑experimentation.

Summary

The study shows that the peptide kisspeptin-10 (also called metastin) can boost the strength of excitatory signals in a part of the brain important for memory (the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus). It does this by acting on a specific receptor (GPR54) and turning on a chain of enzymes called MAP kinases, but the effect is seen only in lab brain slices, not in living people.

Abstract

Metastin is an antimetastatic peptide encoded by the KiSS-1 gene in cancer cells. Recent studies found that metastin is a ligand for the orphan G-protein-coupled receptor GPR54, which is highly expressed in specific brain regions such as the hypothalamus and parts of the hippocampus. This study shows that activation of GPR54 by submicromolar concentrations of metastin reversibly enhances excitatory synaptic transmission in hippocampal dentate granule cells in a mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase-dependent manner. Synaptic enhancement by metastin was suppressed by intracellular application of the G-protein inhibitor GDP-beta-S and the calcium chelator BAPTA. Analysis of miniature excitatory postsynaptic currents (mEPSCs) revealed an increase in the mean amplitude but no change in event frequency. This indicates that GPR54 and the mechanism responsible for the increase in EPSCs are postsynaptic. Metastin-induced synaptic potentiation was abolished by 50 microM PD98059 and 20 microM U0126, two inhibitors of the MAP kinases ERK1 and ERK2. The effect was also blocked by inhibitors of calcium/calmodulin-dependent kinases and tyrosine kinases. RT-PCR experiments showed that both KiSS-1 and GPR54 are expressed in the hippocampal dentate gyrus. Metastin is thus a novel endogenous factor that modulates synaptic excitability in the dentate gyrus through mechanisms involving MAP kinases, which in turn may be controlled upstream by calcium-activated kinases and tyrosine kinases.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2005

DOI

10.1152/jn.00590.2005