| Literature DB >> 34566891 |
Yoshihisa Uenoyama1, Mayuko Nagae1, Hitomi Tsuchida1, Naoko Inoue1, Hiroko Tsukamura1.
Abstract
Increasing evidence accumulated during the past two decades has demonstrated that the then-novel kisspeptin, which was discovered in 2001, the known neuropeptides neurokinin B and dynorphin A, which were discovered in 1983 and 1979, respectively, and their G-protein-coupled receptors, serve as key molecules that control reproduction in mammals. The present review provides a brief historical background and a summary of our recent understanding of the roles of hypothalamic neurons expressing kisspeptin, neurokinin B, and dynorphin A, referred to as KNDy neurons, in the central mechanism underlying gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) pulse generation and subsequent tonic gonadotropin release that controls mammalian reproduction.Entities:
Keywords: GPR54; Kiss1; NK3 receptor; Pdyn; Tac3; κ-opioid receptor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34566891 PMCID: PMC8458932 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2021.724632
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Schematic illustration of kisspeptin, neurokinin B, dynorphin A, and their precursors in humans, mice, rats, cattle, sheep, and pigs based on the previous reports (43, 45, 47, 49) and UniProtKB (https://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/). The precursors comprise a signal peptide in the N-terminal. (A) Kisspeptin consists of 52 or 54 amino acids cleaved from the precursors and the C-terminal is amidated. The C-terminal 10-amino acids (Kp-10) are identical among mice, rats, cattle, sheep, and pigs. Note that C-terminal tyrosine is replaced with phenylalanine in humans. (B) Neurokinin B consists of 10 amino acids cleaved from the precursors and the C-terminal is amidated. The amino acid sequence of neurokinin B is identical among humans, mice, rats, cattle, sheep, and pigs. The C-terminal amino acid sequence Phe-X-Gly-Leu-Met (or Leu)-amide is commonly found in tachykinin family peptides. (C) Dynorphin A consists of 17 amino acids cleaved from their precursors. The amino acid sequence of dynorphin A is identical among mice, rats, cattle, sheep, and pigs. The N-terminal amino acid sequence Tyr-Gly-Gly-Phe-Leu (or Met) are commonly found in endogenous opioid peptides.
Co-expression % of neurokinin B or dynorphin A in the arcuate kisspeptin neurons in ruminants, rodents, and rhesus monkeys.
| Species | Sexes and treatments | NKB/Kp | Dyn/Kp | Methods | Reference no. and authors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sheep | Female (OVX+E2) | – | 94% | IHC | ( |
| Female (Ovary intact)1 | 80.4% | – | IHC | ( | |
| Goats | Female (OVX) | 99.5% | 78.0% | IHC | ( |
| Cattle | Female (Ovary intact)2 | almost all3 | >half3 | IHC | ( |
| Rats | Female (OVX) | 97% | – | IHC | ( |
| Female (OVX+E2) | majority4 | majority4 | IHC | ( | |
| Mice | Female (OVX/OVX+E2) | 90% | 92% | ISH | ( |
| Male (Cast/Cast+T) | 94% | 86% | ISH | ( | |
| Female (OVX)5 | 100% | 100% | Pooled cell PCR | ( | |
| Rhesus monkeys | Male (Cast) | 40-60% | – | IHC | ( |
| Female (OVX) | – | 7.3% | IHC | ( |
Cast, castration; Dyn, dynorphin A; E2, estradiol-17β; Kp, kisspeptin; NKB, neurokinin B; OVX, ovariectomy; T, testosterone.
1Data were collected from ewes at the luteal, follicular, and estrous stages.
2Data were collected from heifers at the luteal and follicular stages.
3Data were not shown as percentage.
4Data were not shown as percentage.
5Data were collected from Kiss1-GFP transgenic mice.
Co-expression % of kisspeptin and neurokinin B in the arcuate nucleus of humans.
| Species | Sexes | Ages | NKB/Kp | Kp/NKB | Methods | Reference no. and authors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Humans | Female | 27-74 years old | 77.0% | 95% | IHC | ( |
| Male | Young (21-37 years old) | 75.2% | 32.9% | IHC | ( | |
| Male | Young (21-49 years old) | 72.7% | 35.8% | IHC | ( | |
| Male | Aged (50-78 years old) | 77.9% | 68.1% | IHC | ( | |
| Female | Postmenopausal (64-90 years old) | 78.4% | 66.5% | IHC | ( |
Co-expression % of NK3 receptors or κ-opioid receptors in the arcuate kisspeptin/neurokinin B neurons.
| Species | Sexes and treatments | NK3R | KOR | Targets | Methods | Reference no. and authors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sheep | Female (Ovary intact)1 | 64% | – | NKB | IHC | ( |
| Female (Ovary intact)1 | – | 97.8% | Kp | IHC | ( | |
| Female (Ovary intact)1 | – | 93.5% | NKB | IHC | ( | |
| Rats | Female (OVX+E2) | – | 62% | Kp | ISH | ( |
| Mice | Female (OVX/OVX+E2) | 96% | 20% | Kp | ISH | ( |
| Male (Cast/Cast+T) | 76% | 6% | Kp | ISH | ( | |
| Male (Testis intact)2 | 35% | 41% | NKB | Single-cell PCR | ( | |
| Male (Cast)2 | 86% | 19% | NKB | Single-cell PCR | ( | |
| Female (OVX)3 | 83% | 33% | Kp | Pooled cell PCR | ( |
Cast, castration; E2, estradiol-17β; Kp, kisspeptin; KOR, κ-opioid receptors; NK3R, NK3 receptors; NKB, neurokinin B; OVX, ovariectomy; T, testosterone.
1Data were collected from ewes at the luteal stage.
2Data were collected from Tac2-GFP transgenic mice.
3Data were collected from Kiss1-GFP transgenic mice.
Figure 2Schematic illustration of the hypothetical mechanism controlling gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) pulse generation in mammals. Neurokinin B initiates and/or accelerates synchronized KNDy neuronal activity via stimulatory Gq-coupled NK3 receptors to release kisspeptin that stimulates GnRH release via stimulatory Gq-coupled GPR54 expressed in GnRH neurons. Dynorphin A released from KNDy neurons then terminates KNDy neuronal activity via inhibitory Gi-coupled κ-opioid receptors.