Novel Insights into Mitochondrial DNA: Mitochondrial Microproteins and mtDNA Variants Modulate Athletic Performance and Age-Related Diseases.
Kumagai. Hiroshi H; Miller. Brendan B; Kim. Su-Jeong SJ; Leelaprachakul. Naphada N; Kikuchi. Naoki N; Yen. Kelvin K; Cohen. Pinchas P
Key Findings
- Mitochondrial DNA encodes small peptides such as humanin, MOTS‑c, and SHLPs.
- These microproteins can regulate mitochondrial function and may influence athletic performance and age‑related diseases.
- Research is still early, and most findings are from basic science rather than human trials.
Practical Outcomes
- The main takeaway is that humanin and related mitochondrial peptides are promising targets for future longevity and performance strategies, but there are no proven dosing protocols or supplement recommendations yet. Keep an eye on emerging studies for actionable guidance.
Summary
This paper reviews tiny proteins made by mitochondria, like humanin, that might affect how well we perform in sports and how we age. It explains that scientists have just started discovering these micro‑proteins and think they could be important, but it doesn’t give any specific ways to use them yet.
Abstract
Sports genetics research began in the late 1990s and over 200 variants have been reported as athletic performance- and sports injuries-related genetic polymorphisms. Genetic polymorphisms in the α-actinin-3 (ACTN3) and angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) genes are well-established for athletic performance, while collagen-, inflammation-, and estrogen-related genetic polymorphisms are reported as genetic markers for sports injuries. Although the Human Genome Project was completed in the early 2000s, recent studies have discovered previously unannotated microproteins encoded in small open reading frames. Mitochondrial microproteins (also called mitochondrial-derived peptides) are encoded in the mtDNA, and ten mitochondrial microproteins, such as humanin, MOTS-c (mitochondrial ORF of the 12S rRNA type-c), SHLPs 1-6 (small humanin-like peptides 1 to 6), SHMOOSE (Small Human Mitochondrial ORF Over SErine tRNA), and Gau (gene antisense ubiquitous in mtDNAs) have been identified to date. Some of those microproteins have crucial roles in human biology by regulating mitochondrial function, and those, including those to be discovered in the future, could contribute to a better understanding of human biology. This review describes a basic concept of mitochondrial microproteins and discusses recent findings about the potential roles of mitochondrial microproteins in athletic performance as well as age-related diseases.
Study Information
pubmed
2023
2023-01-21T00:00:00.000Z
10.3390/genes14020286
20
136