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Publication : Estradiol modulates Kiss1 neuronal response to ghrelin.

First Author  Frazao R Year  2014
Journal  Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab Volume  306
Issue  6 Pages  E606-14
PubMed ID  24473434 Mgi Jnum  J:211593
Mgi Id  MGI:5575713 Doi  10.1152/ajpendo.00211.2013
Citation  Frazao R, et al. (2014) Estradiol modulates Kiss1 neuronal response to ghrelin. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 306(6):E606-14
abstractText  Ghrelin is a metabolic signal regulating energy homeostasis. Circulating ghrelin levels rise during starvation and fall after a meal, and therefore, ghrelin may function as a signal of negative energy balance. Ghrelin may also act as a modulator of reproductive physiology, as acute ghrelin administration suppresses gonadotropin secretion and inhibits the neuroendocrine reproductive axis. Interestingly, ghrelin's effect in female metabolism varies according to the estrogen milieu predicting an interaction between ghrelin and estrogens, likely at the hypothalamic level. Here, we show that ghrelin receptor (GHSR) and estrogen receptor-alpha (ERalpha) are coexpressed in several hypothalamic sites. Higher levels of circulating estradiol increased the expression of GHSR mRNA and the coexpression of GHSR mRNA and ERalpha selectively in the arcuate nucleus (ARC). Subsets of preoptic and ARC Kiss1 neurons coexpressed GHSR. Increased colocalization was observed in ARC Kiss1 neurons of ovariectomized estradiol-treated (OVX + E(2); 80%) compared with ovariectomized oil-treated (OVX; 25%) mice. Acute actions of ghrelin on ARC Kiss1 neurons were also modulated by estradiol; 75 and 22% of Kiss1 neurons of OVX + E(2) and OVX mice, respectively, depolarized in response to ghrelin. Our findings indicate that ghrelin and estradiol may interact in several hypothalamic sites. In the ARC, high levels of E(2) increase GHSR mRNA expression, modifying the colocalization rate with ERalpha and Kiss1 and the proportion of Kiss1 neurons acutely responding to ghrelin. Our findings indicate that E(2) alters the responsiveness of kisspeptin neurons to metabolic signals, potentially acting as a critical player in the metabolic control of the reproductive physiology.
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