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Dive into the research topics where James S. Kinsey-Jones is active.

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Featured researches published by James S. Kinsey-Jones.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Kisspeptin signalling in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus regulates GnRH pulse generator frequency in the rat

Xiao Feng Li; James S. Kinsey-Jones; Yewsong Cheng; Alice M. I. Knox; Yuanshao Lin; Nikoletta A. Petrou; Antonia K. Roseweir; Stafford L. Lightman; Stuart Milligan; Robert P. Millar; Kevin O'Byrne

Background Kisspeptin and its G protein-coupled receptor (GPR) 54 are essential for activation of the hypothalamo-pituitary-gonadal axis. In the rat, the kisspeptin neurons critical for gonadotropin secretion are located in the hypothalamic arcuate (ARC) and anteroventral periventricular (AVPV) nuclei. As the ARC is known to be the site of the gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) pulse generator we explored whether kisspeptin-GPR54 signalling in the ARC regulates GnRH pulses. Methodology/Principal Findings We examined the effects of kisspeptin-10 or a selective kisspeptin antagonist administration intra-ARC or intra-medial preoptic area (mPOA), (which includes the AVPV), on pulsatile luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion in the rat. Ovariectomized rats with subcutaneous 17β-estradiol capsules were chronically implanted with bilateral intra-ARC or intra-mPOA cannulae, or intra-cerebroventricular (icv) cannulae and intravenous catheters. Blood samples were collected every 5 min for 5–8 h for LH measurement. After 2 h of control blood sampling, kisspeptin-10 or kisspeptin antagonist was administered via pre-implanted cannulae. Intranuclear administration of kisspeptin-10 resulted in a dose-dependent increase in circulating levels of LH lasting approximately 1 h, before recovering to a normal pulsatile pattern of circulating LH. Both icv and intra-ARC administration of kisspeptin antagonist suppressed LH pulse frequency profoundly. However, intra-mPOA administration of kisspeptin antagonist did not affect pulsatile LH secretion. Conclusions/Significance These data are the first to identify the arcuate nucleus as a key site for kisspeptin modulation of LH pulse frequency, supporting the notion that kisspeptin-GPR54 signalling in this region of the mediobasal hypothalamus is a critical neural component of the hypothalamic GnRH pulse generator.


Journal of Neuroendocrinology | 2009

Down‐Regulation of Hypothalamic Kisspeptin and its Receptor, Kiss1r, mRNA Expression is Associated with Stress‐Induced Suppression of Luteinising Hormone Secretion in the Female Rat

James S. Kinsey-Jones; Xiao Feng Li; A. M. I. Knox; E. S. Wilkinson; X. L. Zhu; A. A. Chaudhary; Stuart Milligan; S. L. Lightman; Kevin T. O’Byrne

Identification of kisspeptin (Kiss1) and its G protein‐coupled receptor 54 (Kiss1r) as an essential component of the hypothalamic‐pituitary‐gonadal (HPG) axis controlling gonadotrophin secretion raises the possibility that kisspeptin‐Kiss1r signalling may play a critical role in the transduction of stress‐induced suppression of reproduction. We examined the effects of: (i) three different stressors, known to suppress pulsatile luteinising hormone (LH) secretion; (ii) corticotrophin‐releasing factor (CRF); and (iii) corticosterone on Kiss1 and Kiss1r expression in key hypothalamic sites regulating gonadotrophin secretion: the medial preoptic area (mPOA) and arcuate nucleus (ARC). Ovariectomised oestrogen‐replaced rats were implanted with i.v., subcutaneous or i.c.v. cannulae. Blood samples were collected at 5‐min intervals for 5–6 h for detection of LH. Quantitative reverse transcriptase‐polymerase chain reaction was used to determine Kiss1 and Kiss1r mRNA levels in brain punches of the mPOA and ARC collected 6 h after restraint, insulin‐induced hypoglycaemia or lipopolysaccharide stress, or after i.c.v. administration of CRF, or acute or chronic subcutaneous administration of corticosterone. We observed down‐regulation of at least one component of the kisspeptin‐Kiss1r signalling system by each of the stress paradigms within the mPOA and ARC. CRF decreased Kiss1 and Kiss1r expression in both the mPOA and ARC. Both acute and chronic stress levels of corticosterone resulted in a concomitant decrease in Kiss1 and an increase in kiss1r mRNA expression in the mPOA and ARC. This differential regulation of Kiss1 and Kiss1r might account for the lack of effect corticosterone has on pulsatile LH secretion. Considering the pivotal role for kisspeptin‐Kiss1r signalling in the control of the HPG axis, these results suggest that the reduced Kiss1‐Kiss1r expression may be a contributing factor in stress‐related suppression of LH secretion.


Neuroscience Letters | 2009

Effects of ghrelin on Kisspeptin mRNA expression in the hypothalamic medial preoptic area and pulsatile luteinising hormone secretion in the female rat.

Sarah Forbes; Xiao Feng Li; James S. Kinsey-Jones; Kevin O'Byrne

The orexigenic gut peptide ghrelin negatively modulates the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axis. Hyperghrelinaemia results during negative energy balance, a state often associated with delayed puberty and disrupted fertility, whilst exogenous ghrelin suppresses pulsatile luteinising hormone (LH) secretion. The recent identification of kisspeptin (Kiss1) and its G protein-coupled receptor (GPR)54 (Kiss1r) as an essential component of the HPG axis controlling gonadotrophin secretion raises the possibility that kisspeptin-Kiss1r signalling may play a critical role in the transduction of ghrelin-induced suppression of LH. Ovariectomised oestrogen-replaced rats were implanted with intravenous catheters and blood samples collected for detection of LH pulses prior to and after intravenous administration of ghrelin (3nM/250 microl) or saline (250 microl) during ad libitum feeding or after overnight fasting. Quantitative RT-PCR was used to determine Kiss1 and Kiss1r mRNA levels in brain punches of the key hypothalamic sites regulating gonadotrophin secretion, the medial preoptic area (mPOA) and arcuate nucleus (ARC), collected 6h following administration of ghrelin. Ghrelin significantly lowered LH pulse frequency in fed rats, an effect significantly enhanced by food deprivation. Fasting, ghrelin or their combination down-regulated Kiss1, without affecting Kiss1r, expression in the mPOA, and affected the expression of neither in the ARC. Considering the pivotal role for kisspeptin signalling in the activation of the HPG axis, the ability of ghrelin to down-regulate Kiss1 expression in mPOA may be a contributing factor in ghrelin-related suppression of pulsatile LH secretion.


Endocrinology | 2012

The Inhibitory Effects of Neurokinin B on GnRH Pulse Generator Frequency in the Female Rat

James S. Kinsey-Jones; Pasha Grachev; Xiao Feng Li; Yuan Shao Lin; Stuart Milligan; Stafford L. Lightman; Kevin O'Byrne

Neurokinin B (NKB) and its receptor (neurokinin-3 receptor) are coexpressed with kisspeptin and dynorphin A (Dyn) within neurons of the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus, the suggested site of the GnRH pulse generator. It is thought that these neuropeptides interact to regulate gonadotropin secretion. Using the ovariectomized (OVX) and OVX 17β-estradiol-replaced rat models, we have carried out a series of in vivo neuropharmacological and electrophysiological experiments to elucidate the hierarchy between the kisspeptin, NKB, and Dyn signaling systems. Rats were implanted with intracerebroventricular cannulae and cardiac catheters for frequent (every 5 min) automated serial blood sampling. Freely moving rats were bled for 6 h, with intracerebroventricular injections taking place after a 2-h control bleeding period. A further group of OVX rats was implanted with intra-arcuate electrodes for the recording of multiunit activity volleys, which coincide invariably with LH pulses. Intracerebroventricular administration of the selective neurokinin-3 receptor agonist, senktide (100-600 pmol), caused a dose-dependent suppression of LH pulses and multiunit activity volleys. The effects of senktide did not differ between OVX and 17β-estradiol-replaced OVX animals. Pretreatment with a selective Dyn receptor (κ opioid receptor) antagonist, norbinaltorphimine (6.8 nmol), blocked the senktide-induced inhibition of pulsatile LH secretion. Intracerebroventricular injection of senktide did not affect the rise in LH concentrations after administration of kisspeptin (1 nmol), and neither did kisspeptin preclude the senktide-induced suppression of LH pulses. These data show that NKB suppresses the frequency of the GnRH pulse generator in a Dyn/κ opioid receptor-dependent fashion.


Journal of Neuroendocrinology | 2006

Differential role of corticotrophin-releasing factor receptor types 1 and 2 in stress-induced suppression of pulsatile luteinising hormone secretion in the female rat.

Xiao Feng Li; James E. Bowe; James S. Kinsey-Jones; Susan D. Brain; Sf Lightman; Kevin O'Byrne

Corticotrophin‐releasing factor (CRF) plays a pivotal role in stress‐induced suppression of the gonadotrophin‐releasing hormone pulse generator. We have previously shown that type 2 CRF receptors (CRF2) mediate restraint stress‐induced suppression of luteinising hormone (LH) pulses in the rat. The present study aimed: (i) to determine whether type 1 CRF receptors (CRF1) are also involved in this response to restraint and (ii) to investigate the differential involvement of CRF1 and CRF2 in the suppression of LH pulses in response to the metabolic perturbation of insulin‐induced hypoglycemia and the innate immunological challenge of lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Ovariectomised rats with oestrogen replacement were implanted with intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) and intravenous (i.v.) cannulae. Blood samples (25 µl) were collected every 5 min for 5 h for LH measurement. After 2 h of controlled blood sampling, rats were either exposed to restraint (1 h) or injected intravenously with insulin (0.25 IU/kg) or LPS (5 µg/kg). All three stressors suppressed LH pulses. The CRF1 antagonist SSR125543Q (11.5 µmol/rat i.v., 30 min before stressor) blocked the inhibitory response to restraint, but not hypoglycaemia or LPS stress. In addition to its effect on restraint, the CRF2 antagonist astressin2‐B (28 nmol/rat i.c.v., 10 min before insulin or LPS) blocked hypoglycaemia or LPS stress‐induced suppression of LH pulses. These results suggest that hypoglycaemia and LPS stress‐induced LH suppression involves activation of CRF2 while restraint stress‐induced inhibition of LH pulses involves both CRF1 and CRF2.


Journal of Neuroendocrinology | 2009

Neonatal Lipopolysaccharide Exposure Delays Puberty and Alters Hypothalamic Kiss1 and Kiss1r mRNA Expression in the Female Rat

A. M. I. Knox; Xiao Feng Li; James S. Kinsey-Jones; E. S. Wilkinson; X. Q. Wu; Y. S. Cheng; Stuart Milligan; S. L. Lightman; Kevin O'Byrne

Immunological challenge experienced in early life can have long‐term programming effects on the hypothalamic‐pituitary‐adrenal axis that permanently influence the stress response. Similarly, neonatal exposure to immunological stress enhances stress‐induced suppression of the hypothalamic‐pituitary gonadal (HPG) axis in adulthood, but may also affect earlier development, including the timing of puberty. To investigate the timing of the critical window for this programming of the HPG axis, neonatal female rats were injected with lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 50 μg/kg i.p.) or saline on postnatal days 3 + 5, 7 + 9, or 14 + 16 and monitored for vaginal opening and first vaginal oestrus as markers of puberty. We also investigated the effects of neonatal programming on the development of the expression patterns of kisspeptin (Kiss1) and its receptor (Kiss1r) in hypothalamic sites known to contain kisspeptin‐expressing neuronal populations critical to reproductive function: the medial preoptic area (mPOA) and the arcuate nucleus in neonatally‐stressed animals. We determined that the critical period for a significant delay in puberty as a result of neonatal LPS exposure is before 7 days of age in the female rat, and demonstrated that Kiss1, but not Kiss1r mRNA, expression in the mPOA is down‐regulated in pre‐pubertal females. These data suggest that the mPOA population of kisspeptin neurones play a pivotal role in controlling the onset of puberty, and that their function can be affected by neonatal stress.


Endocrinology | 2012

High-Fat Diet Increases LH Pulse Frequency and Kisspeptin-Neurokinin B Expression in Puberty- Advanced Female Rats

Xiao Feng Li; Yuan Shao Lin; James S. Kinsey-Jones; Kevin O'Byrne

To investigate whether the advancement of puberty in response to high-fat diet (HFD) results from a concomitant increase in LH pulse frequency and kisspeptin (Kiss1) and neurokinin B (NKB) signaling in the hypothalamus, blood samples were collected on postnatal day (pnd) 28, 32, or 36 for LH measurement and vaginal opening monitored as a marker of puberty in female rats fed with HFD or standard chow from weaning. Quantitative RT-PCR was used to determine Kiss1 and kisspeptin receptor (Kiss1r) mRNA levels in brain punches of the medial preoptic area and the arcuate nucleus (ARC), and NKB and NKB receptor (NK3R) mRNA levels in the ARC. There was a gradual increase in LH pulse frequency from pnd 28, reaching significance by pnd 36 in control diet-fed rats. The advancement of puberty by approximately 6 d (average pnd 34) in rats fed HFD was associated with an earlier onset of the higher LH pulse frequency that was already extant on pnd 28. The increased levels of expression of Kiss1 in the medial preoptic area and ARC, and NKB in the ARC, associated with pubertal onset were similarly advanced in HFD-fed rats. These data suggest that the earlier accelerated GnRH pulse generator frequency and advanced puberty with obesogenic diets might be associated with premature up-regulation of kisspeptin and NKB signaling in the hypothalamus of the female rat.


Endocrinology | 2015

Relative Importance of the Arcuate and Anteroventral Periventricular Kisspeptin Neurons in Control of Puberty and Reproductive Function in Female Rats

Minghan Hu; Xiao Feng Li; B. McCausland; Shengyun Li; Rebecca Gresham; James S. Kinsey-Jones; James Gardiner; Amir Sam; S.R. Bloom; Lucilla Poston; S. L. Lightman; Kevin G. Murphy; Kevin O'Byrne

Kisspeptin plays a critical role in pubertal timing and reproductive function. In rodents, kisspeptin perikarya within the hypothalamic arcuate (ARC) and anteroventral periventricular (AVPV) nuclei are thought to be involved in LH pulse and surge generation, respectively. Using bilateral microinjections of recombinant adeno-associated virus encoding kisspeptin antisense into the ARC or AVPV of female rats at postnatal day 10, we investigated the relative importance of these two kisspeptin populations in the control of pubertal timing, estrous cyclicity, and LH surge and pulse generation. A 37% knockdown of kisspeptin in the AVPV resulted in a significant delay in vaginal opening and first vaginal estrous, abnormal estrous cyclicity, and reduction in the occurrence of spontaneous LH surges, although these retained normal amplitude. This AVPV knockdown had no effect on LH pulse frequency, measured after ovariectomy. A 32% reduction of kisspeptin in the ARC had no effect on the onset of puberty but resulted in abnormal estrous cyclicity and decreased LH pulse frequency. Additionally, the knockdown of kisspeptin in the ARC decreased the amplitude but not the incidence of LH surges. These results might suggest that the role of AVPV kisspeptin in the control of pubertal timing is particularly sensitive to perturbation. In accordance with our previous studies, ARC kisspeptin signaling was critical for normal pulsatile LH secretion in female rats. Despite the widely reported role of AVPV kisspeptin neurons in LH surge generation, this study suggests that both AVPV and ARC populations are essential for normal LH surges and estrous cyclicity.


Journal of Neuroendocrinology | 2010

Corticotrophin-Releasing Factor Alters the Timing of Puberty in the Female Rat

James S. Kinsey-Jones; Xiao Feng Li; A. M. I. Knox; Yuan Shao Lin; Stuart Milligan; Stafford L. Lightman; Kevin T. O’Byrne

Puberty is a developmental process that is dependent upon activation of the hypothalamic gonadotrophin‐releasing hormone (GnRH) pulse generator. It is well established that the stress neuropeptide, corticotrophin‐releasing factor (CRF), has a profound inhibitory action on GnRH pulse generator frequency. Although stress is known to affect the timing of puberty, the role of CRF is unknown. The present study aimed to test the hypothesis that CRF plays a critical role in the timing of puberty. On postnatal day (pnd) 28, female rat pups were chronically implanted with i.c.v. cannulae and received 14 days of administration of either CRF, CRF receptor antagonist (astressin‐B) or artificial cerebrospinal fluid via an osmotic mini‐pump. A separate group of rats served as nonsurgical controls. As a marker of puberty, rats were monitored for vaginal opening and first vaginal oestrus. Levels of CRF, CRF receptor types 1 and 2 (CRF‐R1, CRF‐R2) mRNA expression in micropunches of the medial preoptic area (mPOA), hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) and arcuate nucleus (ARC) were determined across pubertal development; brain tissue was collected from a naive group of rats on pnd 14, 32, on the day of vaginal opening, and pnd 77 (Adult). Administration of CRF resulted in a delay in the onset of puberty, whereas astressin‐B advanced pubertal onset. Additionally, CRF and CRF‐R1 mRNA expression was reduced in the mPOA, but not ARC, at puberty. In the PVN, expression of CRF, but not CRF‐R1 mRNA, was reduced at the time of puberty. These data support the hypothesis that CRF signalling may play an important role in modulating the timing of puberty in the rat.


Endocrinology | 2011

The Role of the Medial and Central Amygdala in Stress-Induced Suppression of Pulsatile LH Secretion in Female Rats

Yuanshao Lin; Xiao Feng Li; Micol Lupi; James S. Kinsey-Jones; Bei Shao; S. L. Lightman; Kevin O'Byrne

Medial and central nuclei of the amygdala play a key role in psychogenic and immunological stress-induced suppression of the GnRH pulse generator, respectively.

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