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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
2021 pubmed 47 citations

MOTS-c reduces myostatin and muscle atrophy signaling.

Kumagai. Hiroshi H; Coelho. Ana Raquel AR; Wan. Junxiang J; Mehta. Hemal H HH; Yen. Kelvin K; Huang. Amy A; Zempo. Hirofumi H; Fuku. Noriyuki N; Maeda. Seiji S; Oliveira. Paulo J PJ; Cohen. Pinchas P; Kim. Su-Jeong SJ

Key Findings

  • Higher blood MOTS‑c levels are linked to lower myostatin in people.
  • Adding MOTS‑c to muscle cells blocks fat‑acid‑induced atrophy and reduces myostatin expression.
  • In obese mice, MOTS‑c lowers circulating myostatin and activates the AKT‑mTORC2 pathway by inhibiting PTEN via CK2.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, MOTS‑c looks promising as a potential anti‑atrophy supplement, especially for those dealing with insulin resistance or age‑related muscle loss. However, human dosing, safety, and delivery methods are not yet established, so it remains an experimental candidate rather than a ready‑to‑use protocol.

Summary

MOTS‑c, a tiny protein made by mitochondria, can lower the muscle‑wasting hormone myostatin and protect muscle cells from shrinking, at least in lab dishes and obese mice. It does this by turning on a chain of signals (CK2 → PTEN ↓ → mTORC2 ↑ → AKT ↑ → FOXO1 ↓) that keep muscle‑breaking genes quiet.

Abstract

Obesity and type 2 diabetes are metabolic diseases, often associated with sarcopenia and muscle dysfunction. MOTS-c, a mitochondrial-derived peptide, acts as a systemic hormone and has been implicated in metabolic homeostasis. Although MOTS-c improves insulin sensitivity in skeletal muscle, whether MOTS-c impacts muscle atrophy is not known. Myostatin is a negative regulator of skeletal muscle mass and also one of the possible mediators of insulin resistance-induced skeletal muscle wasting. Interestingly, we found that plasma MOTS-c levels are inversely correlated with myostatin levels in human subjects. We further demonstrated that MOTS-c prevents palmitic acid-induced atrophy in differentiated C2C12 myotubes, whereas MOTS-c administration decreased myostatin levels in plasma in diet-induced obese mice. By elevating AKT phosphorylation, MOTS-c inhibits the activity of an upstream transcription factor for myostatin and other muscle wasting genes, FOXO1. MOTS-c increases mTORC2 and inhibits PTEN activity, which modulates AKT phosphorylation. Further upstream, MOTS-c increases CK2 activity, which leads to PTEN inhibition. These results suggest that through inhibition of myostatin, MOTS-c could be a potential therapy for insulin resistance-induced skeletal muscle atrophy as well as other muscle wasting phenotypes including sarcopenia.<b>NEW &amp; NOTEWORTHY</b> MOTS-c, a mitochondrial-derived peptide reduces high-fat-diet-induced muscle atrophy signaling by reducing myostatin expression. The CK2-PTEN-mTORC2-AKT-FOXO1 pathways play key roles in MOTS-c action on myostatin expression.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2021

Date

2021-02-08T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1152/ajpendo.00275.2020

Citations

47

References

55