Skip to main content

Home > Unit on Genetics of Puberty and Reproduction

Regulation of Pubertal Onset and Reproductive Development

Angela Delaney, MD
  • Angela Delaney, MD, Unit on Genetics of Puberty and Reproduction
  • Tiffany Chambers, BS, Postbaccalaureate Intramural Research Training Award Fellow
  • Rebecca Hicks, BA, Postbaccalaureate Intramural Research Training Award Fellow
  • Zheng Zhang, MD, Special Volunteer

We are interested in identifying the factors responsible for pubertal onset in children. Our long-term goal is to define the developmental physiology of pubertal development in order to increase our understanding of human disorders of puberty and reproduction. In collaboration with the Reproductive Endocrine Unit at the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), we are conducting translational research on the neuroendocrine and genetic control of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) secretion and its regulation of gonadotropin secretion and gonadal physiology. We use molecular, cellular, and biochemical techniques to identify and characterize biological pathways that may contribute to the reactivation of GnRH secretion at puberty and to explore diagnostic techniques and treatment of disorders of puberty and reproduction.

The role of gonadotropin pulsations in the regulation of puberty and fertility

The key initiating factors for reproductive development remain among the great mysteries of pediatric and reproductive endocrinology. The onset of puberty is initiated by pulsatile secretion of GnRH from the hypothalamus. GnRH secretion is fully active during the neonatal period, quiescent throughout most of childhood, and is reactivated at puberty to induce sexual maturation and subsequent fertility. The neuroendocrine factors leading to these events remain largely unknown.

Isolated deficiency of GnRH results in the rare clinical syndrome of isolated hypogonadotropic hypogonadism (IHH), in which decreased secretion of GnRH results in impaired secretion of luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) from the pituitary gland. The resultant hypogonadism presents with delayed, incomplete, or absent sexual maturation. In addition, non-reproductive phenotypic features of this spectrum have been identified in some individuals, including anosmia, auditory defects, and skeletal, neurological, and renal anomalies. Defining the physiology of GnRH secretion is critical to understanding the clinical heterogeneity of IHH, particularly in light of emerging gene discoveries that elucidate genotype-phenotype correlations.

Our collaboration has resulted in the addition of the NIH as the second site in an existing protocol at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) to phenotypically characterize subjects with IHH. Clinical studies are now actively under way, enrolling males and females with clinical signs suggestive of IHH for comprehensive phenotyping to include neuroendocrine profiling via an LH pulsatility study and identification of other non-reproductive findings. We have seen a broad range of LH pulsatility patterns and other features, which will be investigated in the context of genetic variants, where identified, in order to increase our understanding of the ontogeny of these disorders. Combining our effort with the established protocol and recruitment mechanisms at MGH has also allowed us to maximize the number of subjects with this rare disorder who can be evaluated. In addition, we are now including neuro-cognitive phenotyping of these subjects, in collaboration with Jay Giedd’s research group, to determine the effect of sex steroid hormone deficiency during puberty on adult cognition.

We are utilizing the disease model of IHH to increase our understanding of the physiology of GnRH secretion, including unknown aspects of GnRH biology that may be illuminated through the non-reproductive characteristics of these patients. Examining the baseline characteristics of subjects with isolated GnRH deficiency will allow us to make genotype-phenotype correlations that will expand our current paradigm of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis, which may have important implications for human disorders of puberty and fertility.

The molecular basis of inherited reproductive disorders

Human and animal models have identified several genes responsible for IHH, but more than half of patients with clinical evidence of the disorder have no detectable mutation. In addition, significant clinical heterogeneity exists among affected individuals, including among members of the same family harboring the same mutations. Recent evidence has expanded our understanding of this spectrum of disorders to include oligo-digenic inheritance, as well as reversibility of the condition, and has provided insight into developmental pathways involved in the ontogeny of GnRH neurons.

Genetic analysis of subjects with unknown mutations is likely to yield important insights into additional pathways involved in the regulation of GnRH secretion, as was the case with the identification of mutations in the kisspeptin receptor (KISS1R, or GPR54) in families with IHH, leading to the emergence of kisspeptin (KISS1) as an important gatekeeper of puberty. This is just one example among many critical discoveries that have been made in this field through molecular exploration. We are conducting genetic investigations of subjects with IHH and their family members to characterize further the phenotypic effect of previously described genetic variants, as well as to identify novel genes involved in congenital GnRH deficiency, using candidate gene and whole exome approaches, as well as linkage analysis. We are also conducting these molecular investigations in individuals with precocious puberty as well as delayed puberty, even when they do not meet diagnostic criteria for IHH, in order to explore the molecular mechanisms underlying these more common variants of pubertal development.

Patients with IHH provide a unique human disease model, which will elucidate the physiology of GnRH secretion, including the neuroendocrine regulation of GnRH secretion. Examining the genetic characteristics of subjects with isolated GnRH deficiency, as well as other pubertal disorders, and correlating these findings with detailed phenotypic characteristics will reveal insights into the mechanisms underlying the reawakening of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis at puberty. This will provide opportunities for new diagnostic capabilities and therapeutic interventions for disorders of puberty and reproduction.

Blockade of kisspeptin signaling in women

The neuropeptide hormone kisspeptin potently stimulates secretion of GnRH from neurons in the hypothalamus. While single doses of kisspeptin stimulate the reproductive endocrine axis, animal models suggest that continuous administration of kisspeptin paradoxically suppresses temporarily the reproductive endocrine axis through desensitization of the kisspeptin receptor. By administering 24-hour infusions of kisspeptin to healthy women and to patients with reproductive disorders, we hope to learn more about the role of kisspeptin in both normal physiology and pathological conditions.

Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common condition characterized by ovulatory dysfunction and hyperandrogenism and is frequently associated with obesity and insulin resistance. Among other disturbances of hormonal regulation, patients with PCOS have high-amplitude, high-frequency LH pulses which may contribute to the oligo-anovulation characteristic of this disorder. We seek to determine if abnormal kisspeptin signaling is involved in these disturbed endocrine dynamics, as greater understanding of how kisspeptin modulates GnRH secretion in this condition could lead to novel therapeutic interventions for this patient population.

In collaboration with Stephanie Seminara and funded through the NIH Bedside-to-Bench Award program, we are developing a new clinical trial to explore the use of continuous kisspeptin to manipulate the reproductive cascade in healthy female volunteers, as well as in women with chronic anovulation due to PCOS. Our approved clinical protocol involves the study of healthy postmenopausal women to determine the safety of continuous kisspeptin administration and the proper dose and conditions required to achieve desensitization of the kisspeptin receptor. Subsequently, the peptide will be given to women in the periovulatory phase of the menstrual cycle and to women with PCOS. Subjects will undergo a frequent blood sampling study to determine the effect of a 24-hour infusion of kisspeptin on GnRH-induced LH pulsatility.

In summary, this study utilizes a cutting-edge physiologic tool to answer key questions about the neuroendocrine control of reproduction in the human female. The information gained from these protocols has the potential to significantly broaden our knowledge of the neuroendocrine control of human reproduction.

Additional Funding

  • NICHD Bedside-to-Bench Award (2012-2014): Blockade of Kisspeptin Signaling in Women

Collaborators

  • Ravikumar Balasubramanian, MD, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA
  • Jonathan Blumenthal, MS, Child Psychiatry Branch, NIMH, Bethesda, MD
  • Yee-Ming Chan, MD, PhD, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA
  • William F. Crowley, Jr, MD, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA
  • Jay Giedd, MD, Child Psychiatry Branch, NIMH, Bethesda, MD
  • Janet E. Hall, MD, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA
  • Francois Lalonde, PhD, Child Psychiatry Branch, NIMH, Bethesda, MD
  • Margaret F. Lippincott, MD, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA
  • Stephanie B. Seminara, MD, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA
  • Natalie D. Shaw, MD, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA

Top of Page