Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/11499/10109
Title: Substance P regulates puberty onset and fertility in the female mouse
Authors: Simavli, Serap Aynur
Thompson, I.R.
Maguire, C.A.
Gill, J.C.
Carroll, R.S.
Wolfe, A.
Kaiser, U.B.
Keywords: gonadorelin
gonadotropin
metastin
neurokinin 1 receptor
neurokinin 1 receptor agonist
substance P
5 aminovalerylsubstance P [7-11][9 proline 10 (n methylleucine)]
peptide fragment
adult
animal experiment
animal model
arcuate nucleus
Article
controlled study
corpus luteum
delayed puberty
female
female fertility
female subfertility
follitropin release
gonadotropin release
litter size
mediobasal hypothalamus
mouse
nociception
nonhuman
phenotype
postnatal development
prepuberty
priority journal
real time polymerase chain reaction
regulatory mechanism
reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction
agonists
analogs and derivatives
animal
drug effects
fertility
genetics
metabolism
puberty
sexual maturation
Animals
Female
Fertility
Gonadotropins
Mice
Peptide Fragments
Puberty
Receptors, Neurokinin-1
Sexual Maturation
Substance P
Publisher: Endocrine Society
Abstract: Puberty is a tightly regulated process that leads to reproductive capacity. Kiss1 neurons are crucial in this process by stimulating GnRH, yet how Kiss1 neurons are regulated remains unknown. Substance P (SP), an important neuropeptide in pain perception, induces gonadotropin release in adult mice in a kisspeptin-dependent manner. Here, we assessed whether SP, through binding to its receptor NK1R (neurokinin 1 receptor), participates in the timing of puberty onset and fertility in the mouse. We observed that 1) selective NK1R agonists induce gonadotropin release in prepubertal females; 2) the expression of Tac1 (encoding SP) and Tacr1 (NK1R) in the arcuate nucleus is maximal before puberty, suggesting increased SP tone; 3) repeated exposure to NK1R agonists prepubertally advances puberty onset; and 4) female Tac1-/- mice display delayed puberty; moreover, 5) SP deficiency leads to subfertility in females, showing fewer corpora lutea and antral follicles and leading to decreased litter size. Thus, our findings support a role for SP in the stimulation of gonadotropins before puberty, acting via Kiss1 neurons to stimulate GnRH release, and its involvement in the attainment of full reproductive capabilities in female mice. Copyright © 2015 by the Endocrine Society.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/11499/10109
https://doi.org/10.1210/en.2014-2012
ISSN: 0013-7227
Appears in Collections:Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection
Tıp Fakültesi Koleksiyonu

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