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Direct evidence that KNDy neurons maintain gonadotropin pulses and folliculogenesis as the GnRH pulse generator.

Mayuko NagaeYoshihisa UenoyamaSaki OkamotoHitomi TsuchidaKana IkegamiTeppei GotoSutisa MajaruneSho NakamuraMakoto SanboMasumi HirabayashiKenta KobayashiNaoko InoueHiroko Tsukamura
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2021)
The gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) pulse is fundamental for mammalian reproduction: GnRH pulse regimens are needed as therapies for infertile women as continuous GnRH treatment paradoxically inhibits gonadotropin release. Circumstantial evidence suggests that the hypothalamic arcuate KNDy neurons expressing kisspeptin (encoded by Kiss1), neurokinin B (encoded by Tac3), and d ynorphin A serve as a GnRH pulse generator; however, no direct evidence is currently available. Here, we show that rescuing >20% KNDy neurons by transfecting Kiss1 inside arcuate Tac3 neurons, but not outside of these neurons, recovered folliculogenesis and luteinizing hormone (LH) pulses, an indicator of GnRH pulses, in female global Kiss1 knockout (KO) rats and that >90% conditional arcuate Kiss1 KO in newly generated Kiss1-floxed rats completely suppressed LH pulses. These results first provide direct evidence that KNDy neurons are the GnRH pulse generator, and at least 20% of KNDy neurons are sufficient to maintain folliculogenesis via generating GnRH/gonadotropin pulses.
Keyphrases
  • spinal cord
  • blood pressure
  • polycystic ovary syndrome
  • adipose tissue
  • metabolic syndrome
  • insulin resistance
  • combination therapy
  • pregnancy outcomes
  • replacement therapy
  • breast cancer risk