نتایج جستجو برای: kisspeptin

تعداد نتایج: 1308  

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Endocrinology and metabolism 2014
Matthew Beymer Ariel L Negrón Guiqin Yu Samuel Wu Christian Mayer Richard Z Lin Ulrich Boehm Maricedes Acosta-Martínez

Hypothalamic kisspeptin neurons integrate and translate cues from the internal and external environments that regulate gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) secretion and maintain fertility in mammals. However, the intracellular signaling pathways utilized to translate such information into changes in kisspeptin expression, release, and ultimately activation of the kisspeptin-receptive GnRH net...

Journal: :Endocrinology 2006
J Roa E Vigo J M Castellano V M Navarro R Fernández-Fernández F F Casanueva C Dieguez E Aguilar L Pinilla M Tena-Sempere

Kisspeptins, products of the KiSS-1 gene with ability to bind G protein-coupled receptor 54 (GPR54), have been recently identified as major gatekeepers of reproductive function with ability to potently activate the GnRH/LH axis. Yet, despite the diversity of functional states of the female gonadotropic axis, pharmacological characterization of this effect has been mostly conducted in pubertal a...

Journal: :The Journal of clinical investigation 2012
Charlotte Sonigo Justine Bouilly Nadège Carré Virginie Tolle Alain Caraty Javier Tello Fabian-Jesus Simony-Conesa Robert Millar Jacques Young Nadine Binart

Hyperprolactinemia is the most common cause of hypogonadotropic anovulation and is one of the leading causes of infertility in women aged 25-34. Hyperprolactinemia has been proposed to block ovulation through inhibition of GnRH release. Kisspeptin neurons, which express prolactin receptors, were recently identified as major regulators of GnRH neurons. To mimic the human pathology of anovulation...

2016
Silvia León Daniela Fernadois Alexandra Sull Judith Sull Michele Calder Kanako Hayashi Moshmi Bhattacharya Stephen Power George A. Vilos Angelos G. Vilos Manuel Tena-Sempere Andy V. Babwah

Uterine growth and endometrial gland formation (adenogenesis) and function, are essential for fertility and are controlled by estrogens and other regulators, whose nature and physiological relevance are yet to be elucidated. Kisspeptin, which signals via Kiss1r, is essential for fertility, primarily through its central control of the hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian axis, but also likely through ...

Journal: :Neuroendocrinology 2017
Rafael Pineda Fabrice Plaisier Robert P Millar Mike Ludwig

Kisspeptins and their receptors are potent regulators of the gonadotropic axis. Kisspeptin neurons are found mainly in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus and the anteroventral periventricular nucleus. However, there is also a third population of kisspeptin neurons, located in the amygdala. We used fluorescence immunohistochemistry to quantify and localize the amygdala kisspeptin neurons and to re...

Journal: :General and comparative endocrinology 2013
Unurjargal Sukhbaatar Haruhiko Kanasaki Tselmeg Mijiddorj Aki Oride Kohji Miyazaki

Kisspeptin signaling through its receptor is crucial for many reproductive functions. However, the molecular mechanisms and biomedical significance of the regulation of GnRH neurons by kisspeptin have not been adequately elucidated. In the present study, we found that kisspeptin increases GnRH receptor (GnRHR) expression in a GnRH-producing cell line (GT1-7). Because cellular activity of G prot...

2016
Yoshihisa UENOYAMA Vutha PHENG Hiroko TSUKAMURA Kei-ichiro MAEDA

Kisspeptin, encoded by KISS1/Kiss1 gene, is now considered a master regulator of reproductive functions in mammals owing to its involvement in the direct activation of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) neurons after binding to its cognate receptor, GPR54. Ever since the discovery of kisspeptin, intensive studies on hypothalamic expression of KISS1/Kiss1 and on physiological roles of hypotha...

2013
Hua Mei Joanne Doran Victoria Kyle Shel-Hwa Yeo William H. Colledge

Kisspeptins are a family of overlapping neuropeptides encoded by the Kiss1 gene that regulate the mammalian reproductive axis by a central action in the hypothalamus to stimulate GnRH release. Kisspeptins and their receptor (GPR54 also called KISS1R) are also expressed in the testes but a functional role in this tissue has not been confirmed. We examined which cell types in the testes expressed...

2017
Mikio YAMASAKI Akira KUWAHARA Takeshi IWASA Yuri YAMAMOTO Yuka TANIGUCHI Yuya YANO Sumika MATSUI Toshiya MATSUZAKI Minoru IRAHARA

Kisspeptin, which is encoded by the Kiss1 gene, and its receptor, the G protein-coupled receptor 54 (Kiss1r), play important roles in the regulation of reproductive functions in mammals. Several studies have shown that the Kiss1 and Kiss1r genes are expressed in the rat, primate, and human ovaries, and that the ovarian kisspeptin system plays a pivotal role in ovulation at the proestrous stage ...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2012
Naresh Kumar Hanchate Jyoti Parkash Nicole Bellefontaine Danièle Mazur William H Colledge Xavier d'Anglemont de Tassigny Vincent Prevot

Reproduction is controlled in the brain by a neural network that drives the secretion of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH). Various permissive homeostatic signals must be integrated to achieve ovulation in mammals. However, the neural events controlling the timely activation of GnRH neurons are not completely understood. Here we show that kisspeptin, a potent activator of GnRH neuronal acti...

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