Mots-C
Mitochondrial open reading frame of the 12S rRNA-c, MT-RNR1, Mitochondrial-derived peptide MOTS-c
MOTS-c increases in skeletal muscle following long-term physical activity and improves acute exercise performance after a single dose.
Hyatt. Jon-Philippe K JK
Key Findings
- 4–8 weeks of voluntary running increased MOTS‑c protein 1.5‑5× in several leg muscles, and the rise persisted for 4‑6 weeks of detraining.
- A single injection of MOTS‑c (15 mg/kg) improved total running time by ~12% and distance by ~15% in untrained mice during an acute exercise test.
- After a 90‑minute downhill run, MOTS‑c relocated from the cytoplasm to the nucleus in some soleus muscles, suggesting activity‑dependent signaling.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the study hints that MOTS‑c supplementation could temporarily boost endurance performance, especially for those not regularly training. However, the effective dose in mice is very high and human data are lacking, so any self‑experiment should start with very low doses and careful monitoring. The chronic training effect suggests that regular exercise naturally raises MOTS‑c, so combining modest MOTS‑c dosing with a training program might amplify benefits, but more research is needed.
Summary
In mice, regular running raises the amount of the mitochondrial peptide MOTS‑c in leg muscles, and this boost sticks around even after a few weeks without exercise. Giving an untrained mouse a single dose of MOTS‑c makes it run longer and farther in a short‑term test. The peptide also moves into the nucleus of certain muscles after a downhill run, hinting at a signaling role.
Abstract
Skeletal muscle adapts to aerobic exercise training, in part, through fast-to-slow phenotypic shifts and an expansion of mitochondrial networks. Recent research suggests that the local and systemic benefits of exercise training also may be modulated by the mitochondrial-derived peptide, MOTS-c. Using a combination of acute and chronic exercise challenges, the goal of the present study was to characterize the interrelationship between MOTS-c and exercise. Compared to sedentary controls, 4-8 weeks of voluntary running increased MOTS-c protein expression ~1.5-5-fold in rodent plantaris, medial gastrocnemius, and tibialis anterior muscles and is sustained for 4-6 weeks of detraining. This MOTS-c increase coincides with elevations in mtDNA reflecting an expansion of the mitochondrial genome to aerobic training. In a second experiment, a single dose (15 mg/kg) of MOTS-c administered to untrained mice improved total running time (12% increase) and distance (15% increase) during an acute exercise test. In a final experiment, MOTS-c protein translocated from the cytoplasm into the nucleus in two of six mouse soleus muscles 1 h following a 90-min downhill running challenge; no nuclear translocation was observed in the plantaris muscles from the same animals. These findings indicate that MOTS-c protein accumulates within trained skeletal muscle likely through a concomitant increase in mtDNA. Furthermore, these data suggest that the systemic benefits of exercise are, in part, mediated by an expansion of the skeletal muscle-derived MOTS-c protein pool. The benefits of training may persist into a period of inactivity (e.g., detraining) resulting from a sustained increase in intramuscular MOTS-c proteins levels.
Study Information
pubmed
2022
2022-07-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.14814/phy2.15377
12
52