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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
2017 pubmed 78 citations

Downregulation of circulating MOTS-c levels in patients with coronary endothelial dysfunction.

Qin. Qing Q; Delrio. Silvia S; Wan. Junxiang J; Jay Widmer. R R; Cohen. Pinchas P; Lerman. Lilach O LO; Lerman. Amir A

Key Findings

  • Patients with endothelial dysfunction have significantly lower circulating MOTS‑c levels
  • Plasma MOTS‑c levels positively correlate with both microvascular and epicardial coronary endothelial function
  • Pretreating rat aortic rings or mouse renal arteries with MOTS‑c improves their responsiveness to acetylcholine in vitro

Practical Outcomes

  • If you can measure MOTS‑c, low levels might flag vascular health issues. While direct MOTS‑c supplementation isn’t established for humans, strategies that naturally raise MOTS‑c (like regular exercise, calorie restriction, or certain nutrients) could be worth exploring. Keep an eye on future trials for safe dosing guidelines.

Summary

People with bad coronary blood vessel function have lower levels of the mitochondrial peptide MOTS‑c in their blood, and in lab tests MOTS‑c helped rat and mouse vessels respond better to signals that make them relax. This suggests that MOTS‑c might be important for keeping blood vessels healthy, but we don’t yet know how to safely boost it in humans.

Abstract

MOTS-c is one of the newly identified mitochondrial-derived peptides which play a role in regulating metabolic homeostasis. The current study aimed to investigate whether circulating MOTS-c levels are also associated with endothelial dysfunction(ED) in patients without significant structural coronary lesions. Forty patients undergoing coronary angiography and endothelial function testing for clinical indications of recurrent angina with no structural coronary lesions were included in the study. They were divided into two groups based on coronary blood flow response to intracoronary acetylcholine (ACh) as normal endothelial function (≥ 50% increase from baseline) or ED, (n=20 each). Aortic plasma samples were collected at the time of catheterization for analysis of circulating MOTS-c levels by ELISA. The effect of MOTS-c on vascular reactivity was assessed in organ chambers using aortic rings collected from rats and renal artery stenosis (RAS) mice. Baseline characteristics were similar between the two groups. MOTS-c plasma levels were lower in patients with ED compared with patients with normal endothelial function (p=0.007). Furthermore, plasma MOTS-c levels were positively correlated with microvascular (p=0.01) and epicardial (p=0.02) coronary endothelial function. Although MOTS-c did not have direct vasoactive effects, pretreating aortic rings from rats or RAS mice with MOTS-c (2μg/ml) improved vessel responsiveness to ACh compared with vessels without MOTS-c treatment. Lower circulating endogenous MOTS-c levels in human subjects are associated with impaired coronary endothelial function. In rodents, MOTS-c improves endothelial function in vitro. Thus, MOTS-c represents a novel potential therapeutic target in patients with ED.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2017

Date

2017-12-06T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.ijcard.2017.12.001

Citations

78

References

43