Litcius/Paper detail

The relation between obesity, kisspeptin, leptin, and male fertility

Saber Ghaderpour, Rafighe Ghiasi, Hamed Heydari, ‬Rana Keyhanmanesh

2021Hormone Molecular Biology and Clinical Investigation22 citationsDOI

Abstract

Over the past decades, obesity and infertility in men increased in parallel, and the association between both phenomena have been examined by several researchers. despite the fact that there is no agreement, obesity appears to affect the reproductive potential of men through various mechanisms, such as changes in the hypothalamic-pituitary-testicular (HPT) axis, spermatogenesis, sperm quality and/or alteration of sexual health. Leptin is a hormone produced by the adipose tissue, and its production elevates with increasing body fat. Many studies have supported the relationship between raised leptin production and reproductive function regulation. In fact, Leptin acts on the HPT axis in men at all levels. However, most obese men are insensitive to increased production of endogenous leptin and functional leptin resistance development. Recently, it has been recommended that Kisspeptin neurons mediate the leptin's effects on the reproductive system. Kisspeptin binding to its receptor on gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) neurons, activates the mammal's reproductive axis and stimulates GnRH release. Increasing infertility associated with obesity is probably mediated by the Kisspeptin-GnRH pathway. In this review, the link between obesity, kisspeptin, leptin, and male fertility will be discussed.

Topics & Concepts

KisspeptinLeptinObesityMedicineInternal medicineFertilityEndocrinologyEnvironmental healthPopulationHormoneHypothalamic control of reproductive hormonesOvarian function and disordersHormonal and reproductive studies