نتایج جستجو برای: Kisspeptins

تعداد نتایج: 148  

Journal: :General and comparative endocrinology 2012
Manuel Tena-Sempere Alicia Felip Ana Gómez Silvia Zanuy Manuel Carrillo

Kisspeptins, the peptide products of the Kiss1 gene, were initially identified in mammals as ligands of the G protein-coupled receptor 54 (GPR54; also termed Kiss1R) with ability to suppress tumor metastasis. In late 2003, the indispensable role of kisspeptins in the control of reproductive function was disclosed by the seminal observations that humans and mice carrying inactivating mutations o...

Journal: :Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters 2013
Ryosuke Misu Shinya Oishi Shohei Setsuda Taro Noguchi Masato Kaneda Hiroaki Ohno Barry Evans Jean-Marc Navenot Stephen C Peiper Nobutaka Fujii

Kisspeptins, endogenous peptide ligands for GPR54, play an important role in GnRH secretion. Since in vivo administration of kisspeptins induces increased plasma LH levels, GPR54 agonists hold promise as therapeutic agents for the treatment of hormonal secretion diseases. To facilitate the design of novel potent GPR54 ligands, residues in kisspeptins that involve in the interaction with GPR54 w...

Journal: :Sudanese journal of paediatrics 2016
Amir Babiker Adnan Al Shaikh

Kisspeptin (previously known as metastin) is a protein encoded by the KISS-1 gene in humans. Kisspeptin producing neurons seem to bridge the gap between the sex steroid levels and feedback mechanisms that control the gonadotropin releasing hormone secretion. Since 2003, there are many studies on the facets of neuroendocrine networks that control puberty and fertility. These have explored the ro...

Journal: :Indian Journal of Science and Technology 2011

Journal: :The Journal of endocrinology 2016
Sophie A Clarke Waljit S Dhillo

Since its first description in 1996, the KISS1 gene and its peptide products, kisspeptins, have increasingly become recognised as key regulators of reproductive health. With kisspeptins acting as ligands for the kisspeptin receptor KISS1R (previously known as GPR54 or KPR54), recent work has consistently shown that administration of kisspeptin across a variety of species stimulates gonadotrophi...

Journal: :Physiological reviews 2012
Leonor Pinilla Enrique Aguilar Carlos Dieguez Robert P Millar Manuel Tena-Sempere

Procreation is essential for survival of species. Not surprisingly, complex neuronal networks have evolved to mediate the diverse internal and external environmental inputs that regulate reproduction in vertebrates. Ultimately, these regulatory factors impinge, directly or indirectly, on a final common pathway, the neurons producing the gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), which stimulates pi...

2013
Sebastián Escobar Arianna Servili Felipe Espigares Marie-Madeleine Gueguen Isabel Brocal Alicia Felip Ana Gómez Manuel Carrillo Silvia Zanuy Olivier Kah

This study, conducted in the brain of a perciform fish, the European sea bass, aimed at raising antibodies against the precursor of the kisspeptins in order to map the kiss systems and to correlate the expression of kisspeptins, kiss1 and kiss2, with that of kisspeptin receptors (kiss-R1 and kiss-R2). Specific antibodies could be raised against the preprokiss2, but not the preoprokiss1. The dat...

Journal: :Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry 2014
Masato Kaneda Ryosuke Misu Hiroaki Ohno Akira Hirasawa Nahoko Ieda Yoshihisa Uenoyama Hiroko Tsukamura Kei-ichiro Maeda Shinya Oishi Nobutaka Fujii

Kisspeptins are neuropeptides that induce the secretion of gonadotropin-releasing hormone via the activation of the cognate receptor, G-protein coupled receptor 54 (GPR54). The kisspeptin-GPR54 axis is associated with the onset of puberty and the maintenance of the reproductive system. In this study, several fluorescent probes have been designed and synthesized for rat GPR54 through the modific...

Journal: :Comparative biochemistry and physiology. Part A, Molecular & integrative physiology 2012
Benjamin H Beck S Adam Fuller Eric Peatman Matthew E McEntire Ahmed Darwish Donald W Freeman

The present study assesses the effects of chronic administration of peptides to fish, termed kisspeptins, which are the products of the KISS1 and KISS2 genes, and have been shown to control the development of puberty in animals. Using ecologically and commercially important species (white bass, Morone chrysops, striped bass, Morone saxatilis, and their hybrid) as comparative models, we determin...

Journal: :Biology of reproduction 2011
Juan Roa Victor M Navarro Manuel Tena-Sempere

Kisspeptins, a family of neuropeptides encoded by the Kiss1 gene that are mainly expressed in discrete neuronal populations of the hypothalamus, have recently emerged as essential upstream regulatory elements of GnRH (gonadotropin-releasing hormone) neurons and, thereby, potent elicitors of gonadotropin secretion. Indeed, kisspeptins are now recognized as important regulators of key aspects of ...

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