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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
2023 pubmed 16 citations

The protective effect of the mitochondrial-derived peptide MOTS-c on LPS-induced septic cardiomyopathy.

Wu. Jiaqi J; Xiao. Danrui D; Yu. Kaiwen K; Shalamu. Kudureti K; He. Ben B; Zhang. Min M

Key Findings

  • MOTS‑c lowers inflammatory cytokine mRNA (IL‑1β, IL‑4, IL‑6, TNF‑α) in heart cells exposed to LPS.
  • MOTS‑c reduces blood markers of heart injury (CK‑MB, troponin T) and improves mitochondrial function.
  • The protective effects depend on AMPK activation; inhibiting AMPK with compound C cancels the benefits.
  • MOTS‑c also modulates other signaling pathways: activates AMPK, AKT, ERK and suppresses JNK, STAT3.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, MOTS‑c shows promise as a mitochondrial‑protective, anti‑inflammatory agent, but the evidence is limited to cell/animal models of sepsis. No human dosing, safety, or efficacy data are available yet, so it isn’t ready for self‑experimentation. Keep an eye on future trials for potential broader applications in metabolic health or longevity.

Summary

A study found that the mitochondrial peptide MOTS‑c can protect heart cells from damage caused by severe bacterial infection (sepsis) in lab experiments. It lowers inflammation, reduces oxidative stress, and prevents cell death by turning on the AMPK pathway. Blocking AMPK removes these benefits, showing the pathway is essential for MOTS‑c’s effect.

Abstract

Septic cardiomyopathy is associated with mechanisms such as excessive inflammation, oxidative stress, regulation of calcium homeostasis, endothelial dysfunction, mitochondrial dysfunction, and cardiomyocyte death, and there is no effective treatment at present. MOTS-c is a mitochondria-derived peptide (MDP) encoded by mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) that protects cells from stresses in an AMPK-dependent manner. In the present study, we aim to explore the protective effect of MOTS-c on lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced septic cardiomyopathy. LPS is used to establish a model of septic cardiomyopathy. Our results demonstrate that MOTS-c treatment reduces the mRNA levels of inflammatory cytokines ( <i>IL-1&#x3b2;</i>, <i>IL-4</i>, <i>IL-6</i>, and <i>TNF&#x3b1;</i>) in cardiomyocytes and the levels of circulating myocardial injury markers, such as CK-MB and TnT, alleviates cardiomyocyte mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress, reduces cardiomyocyte apoptosis, activates cardioprotection-related signaling pathways, including AMPK, AKT, and ERK, and inhibits the inflammation-related signaling pathways JNK and STAT3. However, treatment with the AMPK pathway inhibitor compound C (CC) abolishes the positive effect of MOTS-c on LPS stress. Collectively, our research suggests that MOTS-c may attenuate myocardial injury in septic cardiomyopathy by activating AMPK and provides a new idea for therapeutic strategies in septic cardiomyopathy.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2023

Date

2023-02-25T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3724/abbs.2023006

Citations

16

References

50