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Kisspeptin-10

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

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 2
2002 pubmed

Identification and characterization of mouse metastasis-suppressor KiSS1 and its G-protein-coupled receptor.

Stafford. Lewis Joe LJ; Xia. Chunzhi C; Ma. Wenbin W; Cai. Yi Y; Liu. Mingyao M

Key Findings

  • Mouse and human kisspeptin-10 peptides differ by only one amino acid, keeping the active part almost identical.
  • Binding of kisspeptin-10 to its G‑protein‑coupled receptor activates the Gαq‑PLC‑Ca2+ signaling cascade.
  • Activation of this pathway suppresses cell proliferation and migration, key steps in tumor metastasis.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the main takeaway is that kisspeptin-10 shows anti‑cancer activity at the cellular level, but there’s no guidance on safe doses, delivery methods, or effects on normal health metrics. Until human trials are available, it remains a research finding rather than a usable supplement or protocol for longevity or performance.

Summary

Scientists discovered that the short peptide kisspeptin-10, which is almost the same in mice and humans, can bind to a special receptor and turn on a cell signaling pathway that reduces cell growth and movement. This effect could help stop cancer cells from spreading, but the study was done in mouse cells and didn’t test any real‑world dosing or safety in people.

Abstract

G-protein-coupled receptors receive many different signals to activate different functions such as cellgrowth, proliferation, and migration. KiSS1 is a metastasis suppressor gene that has been shown to inhibit metastasis of human melanomas and breast carcinomas. The human KiSS1 gene encodes a COOH-terminally amidated active peptide, and this peptide is the ligand of a novel G-protein-coupled receptor. However, the mechanism of the antimetastatic actions of KiSS1 and its G-protein-coupled receptor has not been elucidated. In this study, we identified the mouse homologues of the KiSS1 peptide and its G-protein-coupled receptor and characterized the signaling pathways mediated by the activation of the KiSS1 receptor. Although human and mouse KiSS1 proteins share relatively low overall homology (52%), the active peptides (10-amino-acid residues) are highly conserved between mouse and human KiSS1 proteins, varying by only one conserved amino acid [Tyr (Y) to Phe (F)]. Activation of the receptor by KiSS1 peptide leads to the activation of G-protein-activated phospholipase C (PLC-beta), which suggests direct coupling of the KiSS1 peptide to the Galphaq-mediate PLC-Ca2+ signaling pathway. Furthermore, activation of the KiSS1 receptor inhibits cell proliferation and cell migration, key characteristics of tumor metastasis.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2002

Date

2002-10-01T00:00:00.000Z