AI Article Synopsis

  • - Kisspeptin is crucial for puberty and reproduction, and animals lacking it often face infertility, but recent studies challenge this idea, showing that losing most Kiss1 neurons doesn’t stop reproduction.
  • - The hypothesis is that minimal amounts of kisspeptin could still allow for reproduction, even in animals with drastically reduced Kiss1 expression, suggesting redundancy in its role.
  • - Testing in a specific mouse model revealed that while male mice with severely reduced Kiss1 expression can still reproduce effectively, female mice require higher levels to maintain fertility and normal ovulation.

Article Abstract

Kisspeptin (Kiss1) signaling to GnRH neurons is widely acknowledged to be a prerequisite for puberty and reproduction. Animals lacking functional genes for either kisspeptin or its receptor exhibit low gonadotropin secretion and infertility. Paradoxically, a recent study reported that genetic ablation of nearly all Kiss1-expressing neurons (Kiss1 neurons) does not impair reproduction, arguing that neither Kiss1 neurons nor their products are essential for sexual maturation. We posited that only minute quantities of kisspeptin are sufficient to support reproduction. If this were the case, animals having dramatically reduced Kiss1 expression might retain fertility, testifying to the redundancy of Kiss1 neurons and their products. To test this hypothesis and to determine whether males and females differ in the required amount of kisspeptin needed for reproduction, we used a mouse (Kiss1-CreGFP) that has a severe reduction in Kiss1 expression. Mice that are heterozygous and homozygous for this allele (Kiss1(Cre/+) and Kiss1(Cre/Cre)) have ∼50% and 95% reductions in Kiss1 transcript, respectively. We found that although male Kiss1(Cre/Cre) mice sire normal-sized litters, female Kiss1(Cre/Cre) mice exhibit significantly impaired fertility and ovulation. These observations suggest that males require only 5% of normal Kiss1 expression to be reproductively competent, whereas females require higher levels for reproductive success.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3713212PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/en.2013-1222DOI Listing

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