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kisspeptin kisspeptin receptor agonist preclinical animal n preclinical 2026-04-24 PubMed

Kisspeptin-10 Protects Brain from HIV-Induced Damage and Inflammation

Kisspeptin-10 protects against HIV-1 Tat-induced blood-brain barrier dysfunction and neuroinflammation via RhoA/ROCK pathway: Implications for HAND therapy.

Background

Individuals living with HIV-1 often develop HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND), a severe complication characterized by blood-brain barrier (BBB) dysfunction and pervasive neuroinflammation. These debilitating neurological issues are largely driven by the HIV-1 Tat protein, which directly damages brain cells and compromises the BBB. Despite existing antiretroviral therapies, effective treatments specifically targeting these neurological sequelae and restoring BBB integrity remain a significant unmet need.

Study Design

Population
In vitro models of HIV-1 Tat-induced blood-brain barrier dysfunction and an in vivo mouse model of HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND).
Intervention
Kisspeptin-10, dose and route not specified, duration not specified.
Comparator
Control culture / vehicle for in vitro, and untreated HIV-1 Tat-induced model for in vivo.
Outcome
Primary outcomes measured were attenuation of HIV-1 Tat-induced blood-brain barrier dysfunction, restoration of tight junction integrity, reduction of neuroinflammation (pro-inflammatory cytokines, NF-κB activation), and improvements in cognitive function in vivo.

Results

The study revealed that Kisspeptin-10 significantly attenuated HIV-1 Tat-induced blood-brain barrier dysfunction in vitro, leading to a marked restoration of tight junction integrity, which are crucial structures sealing the space between cells. It also significantly reduced neuroinflammation by decreasing the expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines (small proteins that regulate immune responses) and mitigating NF-κB activation, a key regulator of inflammatory genes. Kisspeptin-10 effectively reversed the HIV-1 Tat-induced upregulation of the RhoA/ROCK pathway (a signaling pathway critical for cell structure and function), demonstrating its central mechanism of action in protecting the brain. This inhibition led to a substantial decrease in MMP-9 expression (an enzyme that degrades the extracellular matrix, contributing to BBB permeability). In the in vivo mouse model, Kisspeptin-10 treatment resulted in significant improvements in cognitive function and reduced neuronal damage, reversing the detrimental effects of HIV-1 Tat exposure.

Why It Matters

This research highlights Kisspeptin-10 as a promising novel therapeutic agent for combating the neurological complications of HIV-1 infection, particularly HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND). By specifically targeting and inhibiting the RhoA/ROCK pathway, Kisspeptin-10 offers a unique strategy to protect the blood-brain barrier and effectively reduce neuroinflammation, two critical pathological hallmarks of HAND. This discovery could pave the way for the development of new treatments that significantly improve the cognitive function and overall quality of life for individuals living with HIV. Further preclinical studies are essential to optimize dosing and administration, followed by human clinical trials to validate its safety and efficacy.


kisspeptin kisspeptin receptor agonist blood-brain-barrier nf-kb
Source: pubmed:40712838 · Ingested 2026-04-24 · Digest: gemini-2.5-flash