KisspeptinanimalAnimal model2014

Molecular evolution of kiss2 genes and peptides in vertebrates.

Endocrinology

confidence

Key findings

Molecular evolution study of kiss2 genes and peptides in vertebrates; kiss2 gene and peptide present in turtles and fish, mutated in primates and crocodilians, lost in birds.

View source on PubMed (PMID 23959935) ↗

Sample size
Not reported
Population
Vertebrates (amphibians, fish, turtles, reptiles, primates, crocodilians, birds)
Dosing
Not applicable
Duration
Not reported
Route
Not applicable
Blinding
not_reported
Controls
none
Drug class
reproductive neuropeptide
Full abstract

The kiss1 peptide (kisspeptin), a product of the kiss1 gene, is one of the key neuropeptides regulating vertebrate reproduction. In 2009, we identified a paralogous gene of kiss1 in the brain of amphibians and named it kiss2. Currently, the presence of the kiss2 gene and the kiss2 peptide is still obscure in amniotes compared with that in other vertebrates. Therefore, we performed genome database analyses in primates and reptiles to investigate the molecular evolution of the kiss2 gene in vertebrates. Because the mature kiss2 peptide has been identified only in amphibians, we further performed immunoaffinity purification and mass spectrometry to identify the mature endogenous kiss2 peptide in the brains of salmon and turtle that possessed the kiss2 gene. Here we provide the first evidence for the presence of a kiss2-like gene in the genome database of primates including humans. Synthetic amidated human KISS2 peptide activated human GPR54 expressed in COS7 cells, but nonamidated KISS2 peptide was inactive. The endogenous amidated kiss2 peptide may not be produced in primates because of the lack of an amidation signal in the precursor polypeptide. The kiss2-like gene may be nonfunctional in crocodilians because of premature stop codons. We identified the mature amidated kiss2 peptide in turtles and fish and analyzed the localization of kiss2 peptide mRNA expression in fish. The present study suggests that the kiss2 gene may have mutated in primates and crocodilians and been lost in birds during the course of evolution. In contrast, the kiss2 gene and mature kiss2 peptide are present in turtles and fish.

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