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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 13 citations

Mitofusion is required for MOTS-c induced GLUT4 translocation.

Bhullar. Khushwant S KS; Shang. Nan N; Kerek. Evan E; Wu. Kaiyu K; Wu. Jianping J

Key Findings

  • MOTS‑c raises markers of mitochondrial biogenesis (TFAM, COX4, NRF1) but actually reduces the number of mitochondria detected
  • MOTS‑c increases levels of the fusion proteins OPA1 and MFN2
  • Inhibiting OPA1/MFN2 (by TNF‑α or siRNA) blocks MOTS‑c‑induced GLUT4 translocation and glucose uptake

Practical Outcomes

  • To get the most out of MOTS‑c supplementation, support mitochondrial fusion—through regular exercise, fasting, or nutrients that promote OPA1/MFN2 activity. Without a fusion‑friendly environment, the peptide may not boost glucose handling as expected. No human dosing guidance is provided yet.

Summary

MOTS‑c, a tiny peptide from mitochondria, can help cells pull more sugar into them by moving the GLUT4 transporter to the cell surface, but it only works if the cell’s mitochondria are fusing together properly. The study shows that MOTS‑c boosts proteins that drive mitochondrial fusion (OPA1 and MFN2) and that blocking these proteins stops the sugar‑uptake effect.

Abstract

MOTS-c (mitochondrial ORF of the twelve S-c) is a 16-amino-acid mitochondrial peptide that has been shown to counter insulin resistance and alleviate obesity in vivo. However, the mechanisms involved in the pharmacological action of MOTS-c remain elusive. Based on the ability of MOTS-c to improve insulin resistance and promote cold adaptation, we hypothesized that MOTS-c might play a role in boosting the number of mitochondria in a cell. We found that treatment of mammalian cells with MOTS-c increased protein levels of TFAM, COX4, and NRF1, which are markers for mitochondrial biogenesis. However, flow cytometry analysis using MitoTracker Green revealed a sharp reduction in the mitochondrial count after MOTS-c treatment. We then anticipated possible synchronized activation of mitofusion/mitochondrial fusion by MOTS-c following the onset of mitochondrial biogenesis. This was confirmed after a significant increase in protein levels two GTPases, OPA1, and MFN2, both vital for the fusion of mammalian mitochondria. Finally, we found that inhibition of the two GTPases by TNFα abrogated the ability of MOTS-c to prompt GLUT4 translocation and glucose uptake. Similar results were obtained by siRNA KD of MFN2 as well. Our results reveal for the first time a pathway that links mitofusion to MOTS-c-induced GLUT4 translocation.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2021

Date

2021-07-12T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1038/s41598-021-93735-2

Citations

13

References

57