Kisspeptin
Kisspeptin Product Description — Research Use Only
Kisspeptin is a research peptide encoded by the KISS1 gene and studied for its role in reproductive hormone signaling. It is commonly researched for its activity within the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal, or HPG, axis, where it helps regulate GnRH signaling and downstream LH and FSH pathways. Kisspeptin is often described in scientific literature as a major upstream regulator of reproductive endocrine function.
Research on Kisspeptin has most commonly focused on GnRH signaling, LH and FSH release, testosterone-related pathways, ovarian-response pathways, puberty signaling, fertility-related markers, and endocrine feedback regulation. Published reviews describe Kisspeptin as a neuromodulator that helps control GnRH secretion and connects endocrine and metabolic inputs to reproductive hormone regulation.
Kisspeptin is commonly studied for:
GnRH signaling — how the brain activates reproductive hormone signals
LH activity — how luteinizing hormone pathways are stimulated
FSH activity — how follicle-stimulating hormone pathways are regulated
Testosterone research — pathways connected to natural testosterone signaling
Ovarian-response pathways — research involving follicle and reproductive-cycle signaling
Puberty signaling — how reproductive hormone activity is initiated and regulated
Endocrine feedback — how hormone signals communicate and maintain balance
Kisspeptin is commonly studied because it acts upstream of several major reproductive hormone pathways. Research shows that Kisspeptin signaling stimulates GnRH secretion, which can influence LH and FSH activity, making it useful in studies involving reproductive-axis signaling, fertility-related markers, gonadal hormone regulation, and endocrine feedback systems.
For research use only. Not for human consumption, medical use, diagnostic use, or therapeutic application.
