MOTS-c: The Mitochondrial Key to Metabolic Flexibility
MOTS-c jako peptyd mitochondrialny: krótkie omówienie wyników preklinicznych dotyczących metabolizmu i mimikry wysiłkowej.
Background
MOTS-c (Mitochondrial Open Reading frame of the Twelve S rRNA type-c) is a 16-amino-acid peptide encoded within the 12S ribosomal RNA region of human mitochondrial DNA. Its discovery (Lee et al., 2015, Cell Metabolism) overturned a long-standing assumption that mitochondrial DNA encoded only the 13 classical electron-transport-chain subunits plus rRNAs and tRNAs. MOTS-c established a new class: mitochondrial-derived peptides (MDPs) — nuclear-acting signaling molecules with origins inside the organelle.
Molecular profile
- Sequence: Met-Arg-Trp-Gln-Glu-Met-Gly-Tyr-Ile-Phe-Tyr-Pro-Arg-Lys-Leu-Arg (16 aa)
- Molecular weight: ~2,175 Da
- Encoding: mitochondrial 12S rRNA region (distinct from nuclear-encoded peptides)
- Expression: produced by mitochondria, translocates to cytoplasm and nucleus
- CAS: 1627580-64-6
Mechanism: mitokine signaling
MOTS-c functions as a mitokine — a signaling molecule secreted by mitochondria that coordinates organellar state with nuclear gene expression and systemic metabolism. Principal mechanisms documented in research:
- AMPK activation — MOTS-c activates AMP-activated protein kinase, the master energy-sensor, in skeletal muscle and liver
- Nuclear translocation — under metabolic stress, MOTS-c physically enters the nucleus and modulates transcription factor activity (notably NRF2 and ATF1)
- Glucose uptake — upregulates GLUT4 translocation to the muscle sarcolemma, independent of insulin signaling
- Fatty acid oxidation — enhances β-oxidation gene expression (PPAR-α targets)
- Methionine/folate cycle — modulates genes in one-carbon metabolism
- Exerkine behavior — plasma MOTS-c concentrations increase with exercise in both rodents and humans
- Decline with age — circulating MOTS-c decreases with age in most studied populations
"Exercise in a vial"
The metabolic profile of MOTS-c overlaps substantially with the molecular signature of endurance exercise:
- AMPK activation (same as acute exercise)
- Increased glucose uptake (same as insulin-independent exercise-mediated glucose transport)
- Enhanced fat oxidation (same as endurance adaptation)
- Improved insulin sensitivity (same as exercise-training adaptation)
- Mitochondrial biogenesis gene expression (similar to PGC-1α pathway activation)
This pharmacological resemblance to exercise adaptation is why MOTS-c is often referred to as an exercise mimetic in research literature. Caveat: actual exercise produces many adaptations MOTS-c alone does not replicate.
What laboratories typically study
- Metabolic flexibility — respiratory exchange ratio (RER), substrate switching in muscle and whole-body calorimetry
- Insulin sensitivity — glucose tolerance tests, HOMA-IR, hyperinsulinemic clamps in rodent models
- Diet-induced obesity — prevention and reversal in high-fat-fed mice
- Age-related decline — restoration of metabolic parameters in aged rodents
- Skeletal muscle biology — myotube culture (C2C12), primary muscle, contractility and fatigue
- Exercise pharmacology — comparison with training-induced adaptations
- Nuclear signaling — ATF1/NRF2 ChIP-seq, transcriptomic responses
Handling and quality
- Supplied as lyophilized powder (typical research format 10 mg)
- Store lyophilized at -20°C, protected from light
- Reconstitute with sterile/bacteriostatic water
- Reconstituted solution stable ~4 weeks at 2–8°C
- Verify by HPLC (≥99.0%) with MS identity; request batch COA
Related reading
- /research/mots-c — compound profile
- /blog/mots-c-and-ss-31-mitochondrial-peptide-research — mitochondrial peptide mechanisms compared
- /compare/mots-c-vs-semaglutide — metabolic mechanism comparison
- /category/longevity-and-anti-aging-research — broader category context
RUO disclaimer
For laboratory research use only. Not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Not for human consumption outside approved research settings.