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Mots-C

Mitochondrial open reading frame of the 12S rRNA-c, MT-RNR1, Mitochondrial-derived peptide MOTS-c

Quick Stats
Studies 137
Trials 5
Score 2
2024 pubmed 7 citations

MOTS-c is an effective target for treating cancer-induced bone pain through the induction of AMPK-mediated mitochondrial biogenesis.

Yang. Long L; Li. Miaomiao M; Liu. Yucheng Y; Bai. Yang Y; Yin. Tianyu T; Chen. Yangyang Y; Jiang. Jinhong J; Liu. Su S

Key Findings

  • Mice with bone cancer had lower natural MOTS‑c levels
  • Injecting MOTS‑c reduced cancer‑induced bone pain and bone loss
  • The pain‑relief effect required AMPK activation and improved mitochondrial biogenesis
  • MOTS‑c showed little toxicity to liver, kidney, heart, or lipid metabolism in mice

Practical Outcomes

  • While MOTS‑c shows promise as a new way to treat cancer‑related bone pain, it isn’t ready for personal use. The findings suggest future drug development could target AMPK‑driven mitochondrial pathways, but humans need clinical trials before any dosing or protocols can be recommended.

Summary

In mice with bone cancer, giving the mitochondrial peptide MOTS‑c lowered pain and protected bone, mainly by turning on AMPK and boosting mitochondrial health. The peptide also seemed safe for liver, kidneys, heart and fats, but the study was only in animals and focused on cancer‑related bone pain, not everyday aches.

Abstract

Bone cancer pain (BCP), due to cancer bone metastasis and bone destruction, is a common symptom of tumors, including breast, prostate, and lung tumors. Patients often experience severe pain without effective treatment. Here, using a mouse model of bone cancer, we report that MOTS-c, a novel mitochondrial-derived peptide, confers remarkable protection against cancer pain and bone destruction. Briefly, we find that the plasma level of endogenous MOTS-c is significantly lower in the BCP group than in the sham group. Accordingly, intraperitoneal administration of MOTS-c robustly attenuates bone cancer-induced pain. These effects are blocked by compound C, an AMPK inhibitor. Furthermore, MOTS-c treatment significantly enhances AMPK&#x3b1; <sub>1/2</sub> phosphorylation. Interestingly, mechanical studies indicate that at the spinal cord level, MOTS-c relieves pain by restoring mitochondrial biogenesis, suppressing microglial activation, and decreasing the production of inflammatory factors, which directly contribute to neuronal modulation. However, in the periphery, MOTS-c protects against local bone destruction by modulating osteoclast and immune cell function in the tumor microenvironment, providing long-term relief from cancer pain. Additionally, we find that chronic administration of MOTS-c has little effect on liver, renal, lipid or cardiac function in mice. In conclusion, MOTS-c improves BCP through peripheral and central synergistic effects on nociceptors, immune cells, and osteoclasts, providing a pharmacological and biological rationale for the development of mitochondrial peptide-based therapeutic agents for cancer-induced pain.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2024

Date

2024-05-08T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3724/abbs.2024048

Citations

7

References

54