Mots-C
Mitochondrial open reading frame of the 12S rRNA-c, MT-RNR1, Mitochondrial-derived peptide MOTS-c
Central and peripheral mechanism of MOTS-c attenuates pain hypersensitivity in a mice model of inflammatory pain.
Wang. Zhe Z; Yang. Long L; Xu. Lingfei L; Liao. Jinglei J; Lu. Ping P; Jiang. Jinhong J
Key Findings
- MOTS‑c reduced acute inflammatory pain behaviors in mice
- MOTS‑c lowered chronic inflammatory pain and decreased inflammatory cytokines and glial activation in the spinal cord
- Peripheral MOTS‑c lowered skin inflammation and suppressed CGRP and P2X3 nociceptive neuron activity
Practical Outcomes
- MOTS‑c shows promise as a new way to treat inflammatory pain, but it’s still early‑stage animal work. Biohackers should wait for human safety and dosing data before trying it, though the findings may guide future supplement or drug development aimed at pain relief.
Summary
A study in mice found that the mitochondrial peptide MOTS‑c can lessen pain caused by inflammation, both in short‑term (like after a formalin injection) and long‑term models (like arthritis). It works by calming down inflammatory chemicals in the spinal cord and skin, and by quieting pain‑signaling nerves. However, the research is only in animals, so we don’t yet know if it works or is safe in people.
Abstract
Inflammatory pain is caused by damaged tissue or noxious stimuli, accompanied by the release of inflammatory mediators that often leads to severe hyperalgesia and allodynia with limited therapy options. Recently, a novel mitochondrial-derived peptide (named MOTS-c) was reported to regulate obesity, metabolic homeostasis and inflammatory response. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of MOTS-c and its related regulatory mechanisms involved in inflammatory pain. Male Kunming mice (8-10 weeks-old) were intraplantar injected with formalin, capsaicin, λ-Carrageenan and complete Freund adjuvant (CFA) to establish acute and chronic inflammatory pain. The effects of MOTS-c on the above inflammatory pain mice and its underlying mechanisms were examined by behavioral tests, quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR), western blotting, enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), immunohistochemistry (IHC) and immunofluorescence (IF). Behavioral experiments investigated the potential beneficial effects of MOTS-c on multiple acute and chronic inflammatory pain in mice. The results showed that MOTS-c treatment produced potent anti-allodynic effects in formalin-induced acute inflammatory pain, capsaicin-induced nocifensive behaviors and λ-Carrageenan/CFA-induced chronic inflammatory pain model. Further mechanistic studies revealed that central MOTS-c treatment significantly ameliorated CFA-evoked the release of inflammatory factors and activation of glial cells and neurons in the spinal dorsal horn. Moreover, peripheral MOTS-c treatment reduced CFA-evoked inflammatory responses in the surface structure of hindpaw skin, accompanied by inhibiting excitation of peripheral calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) and P2X3 nociceptive neurons. The present study indicates that MOTS-c may serve as a promising therapeutic target for inflammatory pain.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-01-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1080/01616412.2023.2258584
3
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