Thursday, 09 February 2012

kisspeptin.org

  • Home
  • KissWikiKnowledgebase
    • Basic Biology
    • Reproduction(Endocrine)
    • Reproduction(Ovaries)
    • Placenta
    • Pituitary
    • Metabolism
  • PapersFrom Pubmed
    • Free full-text
    • 2005 and earlier
    • 2006
    • 2007
    • 2008 Jan -June
    • 2008 July -Dec
    • 2009 Jan -June
    • 2009 July-December
    • Most Recent
  • NewsThe Kiss Blog
  • NetworkThe Kiss Lounge
  • SubmitYour Articles
  • ContactGet in touch
  • AboutWho are we?
Home Papers 2008 July -Dec Kisspeptin papers: 2008 July-December

Kisspeptin papers

pubmed: 2008 july-december

NCBI pubmed
  • Evidence for two distinct KiSS genes in non-placental vertebrates that encode kisspeptins with different gonadotropin-releasing activities in fish and mammals.
    Related Articles

    Evidence for two distinct KiSS genes in non-placental vertebrates that encode kisspeptins with different gonadotropin-releasing activities in fish and mammals.

    Mol Cell Endocrinol. 2009 Nov 27;312(1-2):61-71

    Authors: Felip A, Zanuy S, Pineda R, Pinilla L, Carrillo M, Tena-Sempere M, Gómez A

    Kisspeptins, the products of KiSS-1 gene, have recently emerged as fundamental regulators of reproductive function in different mammalian and, presumably, non-mammalian species. To date, a single form of KiSS-1 has been described in mammals, and recently, in several fish species and Xenopus. We report herein the cloning and characterization of two distinct KiSS-like genes, namely, KiSS-1 and KiSS-2, in the teleost sea bass. While KiSS-1 encodes a peptide identical to rodent kisspeptin-10, the predicted KiSS-2 decapeptide diverges at 4 amino acids (FNFNPFGLRF). Genome database searches showed that both genes are present in non-placental vertebrate genomes. Indeed, phylogenetic and genome mapping analyses suggest that KiSS-1 and KiSS-2 are paralogous genes that originated by duplication of an ancestral gene, although KiSS-2 is lost in placental mammals. KiSS-1 and KiSS-2 mRNAs are present in brain and gonads of sea bass, medaka and zebrafish. Comparative functional studies demonstrated that KiSS-2 decapeptide was significantly more potent than KiSS-1 peptide in inducing LH and FSH secretion in sea bass. In contrast, KiSS-2 decapeptide only weakly elicited LH secretion in rats, whereas KiSS-1 peptide was maximally effective. Our data are the first to provide conclusive evidence for the existence of a second KiSS gene, KiSS-2, in non-placental vertebrates, whose product is likely to play a dominant stimulatory role in the regulation of the gonadotropic axis at least in teleosts.

    PMID: 19084576 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]



Developed by Inforemedy.com and Dr. Jyothis George. All rights reserved 2009