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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 2
2022 pubmed 3 citations

Circulating levels of MOTS-c in patients with breast cancer treated with metformin.

Cuyàs. Elisabet E; Verdura. Sara S; Martin-Castillo. Begoña B; Menendez. Javier A JA

Key Findings

  • Metformin (with chemo) did not alter circulating MOTS‑c levels after 24 weeks
  • MOTS‑c levels were similar in patients who achieved pathological complete response and those who did not
  • The lack of effect may be because metformin doesn’t act on skeletal muscle, the main source of MOTS‑c

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, metformin shouldn’t be relied on to raise MOTS‑c levels. If you want to increase this peptide for metabolic or performance benefits, focus on proven methods like regular exercise or direct MOTS‑c supplementation rather than metformin alone.

Summary

In a study of breast‑cancer patients, taking metformin for 24 weeks didn’t change the amount of the exercise‑like hormone MOTS‑c in the blood, even when combined with chemo and trastuzumab. The hormone levels also didn’t predict who would have a complete tumor response. This suggests metformin isn’t a reliable way to boost MOTS‑c.

Abstract

The mitokine MOTS-c is a mitochondrially-encoded "exercise-mimetic peptide" expressed in multiple tissues, particularly skeletal muscles, which can be detected as a circulating hormone in the blood. MOTS-c mechanisms of action (MoA) involve insulin sensitization, enhanced glucose utilization, suppression of mitochondrial respiration, and targeting of the folate-AICAR-AMPK pathway. Although MOTS-c MoA largely overlap those of the anti-diabetic biguanide metformin, the putative regulatory actions of metformin on MOTS-c have not yet been evaluated in detail. Here, we measured circulating MOTS-c in paired baseline and post-treatment sera obtained from HER2-positive breast cancer patients randomized to receive either metformin combined with neoadjuvant chemotherapy and trastuzumab or an equivalent regimen without metformin. We failed to find any significant alteration of circulating MOTS-c -as measured using the commercially available competitive ELISA CEX132Hu- in response to 24 weeks of a neoadjuvant chemotherapy/trastuzumab regimen with or without daily metformin. Changes in circulating MOTS-c levels failed to reach statistical significance when comparing patients achieving pathological complete response (pCR), irrespective of metformin treatment. The inability of metformin to target skeletal muscle, the major tissue for MOTS-c production and secretion, might limit its regulatory effects on circulating MOTS-c. Further studies are needed to definitely elucidate the nature of the interaction between metformin and MOTS-c in cancer and non-cancer patients.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2022

Date

2022-12-06T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.18632/aging.204423

Citations

3

References

34