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The KiSS1/GPR54 system has now been identified in non-mammalian vertebrates. Transcripts encoding for KiSS1 and its receptor, GPR54, have been isolated from a number of fish species. The expression of their genes was characterized in the context of temporal and spatial expression and in response to endocrine manipulations. GPR54 sequence is conserved between mammals and fish, with a second receptor...
The cancer suppressor gene, KISS1, was initially described as having an important role in inhibiting cancer metastasis. Since then, KISS1 and its receptor, KISS1R, have been shown to play a key role in controlling the onset of puberty of reproductive physiology in the human and other species. Recent studies have also linked KISS1/kisspeptin/KISS1R to other processes, such as vasoconstriction, aging,...
Since the stimulatory effect of kisspeptin on gonadotropin secretion is blocked by a GnRH antagonist, it has been suggested that the effect of kisspeptin is manifest exclusively at the level of hypothalamic GnRH secretion. However, kisspeptins are present in ovine hypophysial portal blood suggesting that the pituitary gland may be a target of kisspeptin. Dual fluorescence labeling with a specific...
In recent years, the Kiss1 gene has been cast into the reproductive spotlight. In the short period since the discovered link between kisspeptins, the encoded peptides of Kiss1, and fertility, these peptides are now known to be critical for the neuroendocrine control of reproduction. Kisspeptin producing cells in the hypothalamus are poised to become the ‘missing link’ in the sex steroid feedback control...
The kisspeptin precursor is the protein transcribed from the Kiss-1 gene and the kisspeptins are the peptides that are posttranslationally processed from the precursor. The kisspeptins activate the G-protein coupled receptor GPR54 and are strongly implicated in puberty onset and in regulation of the hypothalamo–pituitary gonadal axis in mammals. Physiological studies have indicated that these effects...
The G-protein coupled receptor, GPR54, and its ligand, kisspeptin-54 (a KiSS-1 derived peptide) have been reported to be important players in control of LHRH-1 release. However, the role of the GPR54 signaling in primate reproductive senescence is still unclear. In the present study we investigated whether KiSS-1, GPR54, and LHRH-1 mRNA in the brain change after menopause in female rhesus monkeys...
The granule cells of the dentate gyrus form the input stage of the hippocampal trisynaptic circuit and their function is strongly influenced by peptidergic systems. GPR54 is highly and discretely expressed in these cells. We have found that activation of GPR54 with kisspeptin-10 causes a rapid and large increase in the amplitude of excitatory synaptic responses in granule cells, without changing membrane...
Various studies have attempted to unravel the physiological role of metastin/kisspeptin in the control of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) release. A number of evidences suggested that the population of metastin/kisspeptin neurons in the anteroventral periventricular nucleus (AVPV) is involved in generating a GnRH surge to induce ovulation in rodents, and thus the target of estrogen positive...
Kisspeptins are the protein products encoded by KiSS1 gene, an important tumor metastatic suppressor and pivotal master hormone of puberty. Although KiSS1 gene is expressed in both central and peripheral tissues, the molecular mechanisms that determine the temporal and spatial expression of KiSS1 gene are not well understood. This review provides an update on the latest studies and ideas about the...
The reproductive phenotypes of nearly two dozen patients with mutations in GPR54 have been reported, as have the phenotypes of four mouse lines mutant for Gpr54 and two lines mutant for Kiss1. These phenotypes demonstrate that kisspeptin/Gpr54 function is required at all phases of the life cycle when the secretion of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) is robust. Furthermore, there is phenotypic...
It is well established that reproductive function is gated by the state of energy reserves of the organism; conditions of metabolic stress and energy insufficiency being frequently coupled to disturbed reproductive maturation and/or infertility. In addition, obesity is also commonly linked to altered puberty onset and reproductive impairment. Such an impact of energy status on the reproductive axis...
The nervous system (both central and peripheral) is anatomically and physiologically differentiated between the sexes, ranging from gender-based differences in the cerebral cortex to motoneuron number in the spinal cord. Although genetic factors may play a role in the development of some sexually differentiated traits, most identified sex differences in the brain and behavior are produced under the...
The present article reviews recent studies of monkeys and, in some cases, humans that have been conducted to examine the role of kisspeptin-GPR54 signaling in the regulation of the hypothalamic–pituitary–gonadal axis in higher primates. This area of peptide biology was initiated in 2003 by the discovery that loss of function mutations of GPR54 in man were associated with hypogonadotropic hypogonadism...
Menopause is characterized by depletion of ovarian follicles, a reduction of ovarian hormones to castrate levels and elevated levels of serum gonadotropins. Rather than degenerating, the reproductive neuroendocrine axis in postmenopausal women is intact and responds robustly to the removal of ovarian hormones. Studies in both human and non-human primates provide evidence that the gonadotropin hypersecretion...
Kisspeptin and its receptor, GPR54, play important roles in mammalian reproduction and cancer development. However, little is known about their function in nonmammalian species. In the present study, we have isolated the cDNA encoding the kisspeptin receptor, GPR54, from the bullfrog, Rana catesbeiana. The bullfrog GPR54 (bfGPR54) cDNA encodes a 379-amino acid heptahelical G protein-coupled receptor...
Kisspeptins, the products of KiSS-1 gene acting via G protein-coupled receptor 54 (GPR54), have recently emerged as fundamental gatekeepers of gonadal function by virtue of their ability to stimulate gonadotropin secretion. Indeed, since the original disclosure of the reproductive facet of the KiSS-1/GPR54 system, an ever-growing number of studies have substantiated the extraordinary potency of kisspeptins...
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