Last updated: March 2026
Kisspeptin-10 is the master upstream regulator of the entire reproductive axis — a 10-amino acid neuropeptide that activates GnRH neurons to trigger LH surges. As an IVF trigger, it achieves comparable oocyte maturation to hCG while dramatically reducing dangerous ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome risk.
Kisspeptin sits at the top of the reproductive hormonal hierarchy — acting even above GnRH. By activating hypothalamic GnRH neurons, it generates a physiologic LH surge that is time-limited and self-terminating, unlike the prolonged hCG exposure that causes OHSS.
Kisspeptin-10 binds the KISS1 receptor (GPR54) on hypothalamic GnRH neurons. This G-protein coupled receptor triggers intracellular calcium release and membrane depolarization in GnRH neurons, causing coordinated pulsatile GnRH secretion from the arcuate nucleus and anteroventral periventricular nucleus.
Kisspeptin neurons are the primary integrators of metabolic, seasonal, and steroidal signals that regulate reproduction. Estrogen acts on kisspeptin neurons to generate the preovulatory LH surge. By administering exogenous kisspeptin, researchers can recapitulate this surge on demand — the basis for its use as an IVF trigger.
Unlike hCG (which has a 36-hour half-life and causes sustained LH-receptor activation), kisspeptin triggers an endogenous LH surge that follows natural physiologic kinetics — rising rapidly then declining over 24–36 hours. This shorter hormonal exposure reduces cumulus cell desensitization and dramatically lowers OHSS risk in high-risk patients.
Kisspeptin neurons also integrate energy balance signals — leptin and insulin act on kisspeptin neurons to communicate nutritional status to the reproductive axis. This is why starvation suppresses reproduction and why women with hypothalamic amenorrhea have low kisspeptin tone. Research into kisspeptin as a therapeutic for functional hypothalamic amenorrhea is ongoing.
Data primarily from Phase 1/2 trials at Imperial College London (Dhillo et al., 2005–2023) and subsequent IVF trigger studies.
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This page is for educational purposes only. It is not medical advice. Kisspeptin-10 is an investigational compound not approved by the FDA or EMA as of 2026. Its use is limited to clinical research settings and specialist fertility centers. Do not self-administer investigational peptides. Consult a board-certified reproductive endocrinologist for fertility treatment options.