Bluesky Facebook Reddit Email

Role reversal: Linking a reproductive pathway to obesity

06.17.14 | JCI Journals

Garmin GPSMAP 67i with inReach

Garmin GPSMAP 67i with inReach provides rugged GNSS navigation, satellite messaging, and SOS for backcountry geology and climate field teams.

People and mice with mutations in a specific signaling pathway, known as kisspeptin, suffer reproductive effects such as delayed puberty and infertility. Research of this pathway has focused on its role in reproduction, but a June 17 study in the Journal of Clinical Investigation looked at its effects on metabolism.

Alexander Kauffman and colleagues at the University of California San Diego found that lack of the kisspeptin pathway in female mice promotes excess weight gain. Mice became overweight as the result of a reduced metabolism and decreased energy, but not as a result of increased food consumption. In her Commentary "Fatness and fertility: which direction?", Stephanie Seminara of Massachusetts General Hospital commends the identification of a link between kisspeptin and metabolism.

The results of this study have potential to translate into approaches to treat human obesity.

TITLE: Impaired kisspeptin signaling decreases metabolism and promotes glucose intolerance and obesity

AUTHOR CONTACT: Alexander Kauffman
University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA
E-mail: akauffman@ucsd.edu

View article: http://www.jci.org/articles/view/71075?key=aacf82c3f48a1c34b440

ACCOMPANYING COMMENTARY: Fatness and fertility: which direction?

AUTHOR CONTACT: Stephanie Seminara
Mass General Hospital & Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA
E-mail: SSEMINARA@partners.org

Journal of Clinical Investigation

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

How to Cite This Article

APA:
JCI Journals. (2014, June 17). Role reversal: Linking a reproductive pathway to obesity. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LP2NQ7VL/role-reversal-linking-a-reproductive-pathway-to-obesity.html
MLA:
"Role reversal: Linking a reproductive pathway to obesity." Brightsurf News, Jun. 17 2014, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LP2NQ7VL/role-reversal-linking-a-reproductive-pathway-to-obesity.html.