MOTS-c: A Mitochondrial-Encoded Regulator of the Nucleus.
Benayoun. Bérénice A BA; Lee. Changhan C
Key Findings
- MOTS‑c is a peptide encoded by mitochondrial DNA, not nuclear DNA.
- Under metabolic stress, MOTS‑c moves from mitochondria to the nucleus.
- In the nucleus, MOTS‑c directly influences gene expression to promote cellular homeostasis.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the study suggests that boosting mitochondrial stress signals (e.g., brief fasting or mild oxidative stress) might naturally increase MOTS‑c activity, potentially supporting metabolic health. However, the research is still early‑stage and does not provide dosing guidelines or direct supplementation protocols.
Summary
Scientists discovered that a tiny protein called MOTS‑c, which is made inside mitochondria, can move into the cell nucleus when the cell is stressed (like low sugar or oxidative stress) and help turn on genes that protect the cell. This shows mitochondria and the nucleus work together more closely than we thought.
Abstract
Mitochondria are increasingly being recognized as information hubs that sense cellular changes and transmit messages to other cellular components, such as the nucleus, the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), the Golgi apparatus, and lysosomes. Nonetheless, the interaction between mitochondria and the nucleus is of special interest because they both host part of the cellular genome. Thus, the communication between genome-bearing organelles would likely include gene expression regulation. Multiple nuclear-encoded proteins have been known to regulate mitochondrial gene expression. On the contrary, no mitochondrial-encoded factors are known to actively regulate nuclear gene expression. MOTS-c (mitochondrial open reading frame of the 12S ribosomal RNA type-c) is a recently identified peptide encoded within the mitochondrial 12S ribosomal RNA gene that has metabolic functions. Notably, MOTS-c can translocate to the nucleus upon metabolic stress (e.g., glucose restriction and oxidative stress) and directly regulate adaptive nuclear gene expression to promote cellular homeostasis. It is hypothesized that cellular fitness requires the coevolved mitonuclear genomes to coordinate adaptive responses using gene-encoded factors that cross-regulate the opposite genome. This suggests that cellular gene expression requires the bipartite split genomes to operate as a unified system, rather than the nucleus being the sole master regulator.
Study Information
pubmed
2019
2019-08-05T00:00:00.000Z
10.1002/bies.201900046
30
176