Mots-C
Mitochondrial open reading frame of the 12S rRNA-c, MT-RNR1, Mitochondrial-derived peptide MOTS-c
Serum MOTS-c levels remain unchanged in patients with preeclampsia.
Tok. Abdullah A; Serdar. Ozer O; Kandilcik. Omer Faruk OF; Alkan-Baylan. Filiz F
Key Findings
- Serum MOTS‑c levels were similar in healthy pregnancies, mild preeclampsia, and severe preeclampsia (p = 0.166).
- Severe preeclampsia patients had higher blood pressure and lower platelet counts compared to controls (p ≤ 0.045).
- No significant association was found between MOTS‑c levels and early‑ or late‑onset preeclampsia (p = 0.102).
Practical Outcomes
- At this time, the findings don’t provide any actionable steps for biohackers or self‑experimenters. MOTS‑c can’t be used as a biomarker or therapeutic target for preeclampsia based on this small study, so there’s no dosage or protocol change to recommend.
Summary
The study looked at a tiny protein called MOTS‑c in pregnant women and found that its blood levels stay about the same whether the women are healthy, have mild preeclampsia, or have severe preeclampsia. The researchers didn’t see any link between MOTS‑c and the disease, so there’s no new supplement or treatment suggestion from this work.
Abstract
Mitochondrial open-reading-frame of the twelve S rRNA-c (MOTS-c) is a mitochondrial derived peptide which has beneficial effects on muscle metabolism, insulin sensitivity, weight regulation, and bone mineral density. This study aims to investigate whether serum levels of MOTS-c are altered in patients with preeclampsia. This is cross sectional a case-control study of 30 patients with uncomplicated pregnancy, 30 patients with mild preeclampsia and 30 patients with severe preeclampsia that were admitted to the study center between June 2020 and January 2021. When compared to the healthy controls and patients with mild preeclampsia, maternal smoking was significantly more frequent, systolic and diastolic blood pressures were significantly higher and platelet count was significantly lower in patients with severe preeclampsia (p = 0.045, p = 0.0001, p = 0.0001 and p = 0.024 respectively). Serum MOTS-c concentrations were statistically similar in healthy controls, mild and severe preeclampsia patients (159.1 ± 28.7 ng/mL vs 129.6 ± 54.7 ng/mL vs 146.4 ± 48.3, p = 0.166). When compared to the healthy controls, systolic and diastolic blood pressures were significantly higher and platelet count was significantly lower in patients with late onset preeclampsia (p = 0.0001, p = 0.0001 and p = 0.022 respectively). Healthy controls and patients with early and late onset preeclampsia were statistically similar with respect to MOTS-c levels (159.1 ± 28.7 ng/mL vs 126.7 ± 56.9 vs 153.7 ± 39.8, p = 0.102). This study failed to detect any significant relationship between MOTS-c and preeclampsia. Large scale research is needed to clarify if MOTS-c is a novel biomarker for preeclampsia and therapeutic target for preeclampsia patients.
Study Information
pubmed
2023
2022-10-07T00:00:00.000Z
10.5603/gp.a2022.0095
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