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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 3
2024 pubmed 14 citations

The Mitochondrial-Derived Peptide MOTS-c Alleviates Radiation Pneumonitis via an Nrf2-Dependent Mechanism.

Zhang. Yanli Y; Huang. Jianfeng J; Zhang. Yaru Y; Jiang. Fengjuan F; Li. Shengpeng S; He. Shuai S; Sun. Jiaojiao J; Chen. Dan D; Tong. Ying Y; Pang. Qingfeng Q; Wu. Yaxian Y

Key Findings

  • MOTS‑c reduced lung tissue damage, inflammation, and oxidative stress after radiation in mice
  • It prevented cell death and preserved mitochondrial function in lung epithelial cells
  • The protective effect depended on activation and nuclear movement of Nrf2, and was lost in Nrf2‑deficient mice

Practical Outcomes

  • While the study is pre‑clinical and uses injections in mice, it suggests MOTS‑c could be a mitochondrial‑protective agent that might help with oxidative stress or radiation exposure. No human dosing or safety data exist yet, so it’s not ready for everyday use, but it highlights a promising avenue for future supplement or therapeutic development aimed at boosting Nrf2‑mediated defenses.

Summary

In mice, the tiny protein MOTS‑c helped protect lung cells from the damage caused by high‑dose radiation, mainly by boosting a cellular defense system called Nrf2 that keeps mitochondria healthy. The benefit disappeared when Nrf2 was missing, showing the peptide works through that pathway.

Abstract

Radiation pneumonitis (RP) is a prevalent and fatal complication of thoracic radiotherapy due to the lack of effective treatment options. RP primarily arises from mitochondrial injury in lung epithelial cells. The mitochondrial-derived peptide MOTS-c has demonstrated protective effects against various diseases by mitigating mitochondrial injury. C57BL/6 mice were exposed to 20 Gy of lung irradiation (IR) and received daily intraperitoneal injections of MOTS-c for 2 weeks. MOTS-c significantly ameliorated lung tissue damage, inflammation, and oxidative stress caused by radiation. Meanwhile, MOTS-c reversed the apoptosis and mitochondrial damage of alveolar epithelial cells in RP mice. Furthermore, MOTS-c significantly inhibited oxidative stress and mitochondrial damage in MLE-12 cells and primary mouse lung epithelial cells. Mechanistically, MOTS-c increased the nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor (Nrf2) level and promoted its nuclear translocation. Notably, Nrf2 deficiency abolished the protective function of MOTS-c in mice with RP. In conclusion, MOTS-c alleviates RP by protecting mitochondrial function through an Nrf2-dependent mechanism, indicating that MOTS-c may be a novel potential protective agent against RP.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2024

Date

2024-05-17T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3390/antiox13050613

Citations

14

References

53