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Mitochondria-Derived Peptide

MOTS-C

Mitochondrial ORF of 12S rRNA Type-C · Mitokine · AMPK Activator

MOTS-C is a 16-amino acid peptide encoded by the mitochondrial genome — not the nuclear genome — discovered in 2015 by Lee et al. in Cell Metabolism. It belongs to a newly characterised class of mitochondrial-derived peptides (MDPs) and is dubbed a 'mitokine' due to its endocrine-like signalling role. Circulating MOTS-C is elevated by exercise and declines with age, positioning it as a key subject in longevity and metabolic biology research.

Molecular Profile
Length16 Amino Acids
Genome OriginMitochondrial 12S rRNA
Primary TargetAMPK Pathway
Key TissuesSkeletal muscle, plasma, liver
ExpressionAge-dependent (declines with age)
Exercise EffectInduced in humans
AMPK ActivatorInsulin SensitiserLongevity ResearchExercise MimeticMitochondrial BiologyGlucose Metabolism
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Laboratory Research Compound — For In Vitro Use Only
This compound is supplied by RS Bio Labs solely as a laboratory research material for use by qualified scientific personnel in in vitro research settings. It is NOT approved, intended, or authorised for human consumption, self-administration, diagnostic, therapeutic, or veterinary use of any kind. All research findings referenced on this page are from preclinical models (cell culture, animal studies) unless explicitly stated otherwise. Preclinical data does not establish safety or efficacy in humans. RS Bio Labs makes no medical or health claims.

Discovery and Biological Origin

MOTS-C's discovery overturned a long-held assumption: that the mitochondrial genome encodes only 13 protein-coding genes. The identification of functional short open reading frames (sORFs) in mitochondrial ribosomal RNA sequences revealed a new category of bioactive peptides with endocrine-like functions — mitokines.

Circulating MOTS-C levels vary meaningfully across physiological and pathological states. Studies have documented lower MOTS-C in patients with type 2 diabetes, coronary endothelial dysfunction, obese children, and gestational diabetes — suggesting an endogenous protective role in metabolic homeostasis. In healthy humans, acute exercise induces MOTS-C expression in skeletal muscle and releases it into systemic circulation.

Metabolic and Exercise Physiology Mechanism

MOTS-C's primary metabolic action occurs through activation of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) — a master metabolic sensor activated when cellular energy (ATP) is low. AMPK activation by MOTS-C promotes glucose uptake in skeletal muscle via GLUT4 translocation, increases fatty acid oxidation, and inhibits de novo lipid synthesis.

MOTS-C has also been shown to directly inhibit the folate-methionine cycle, elevating AICAR — an endogenous AMPK activator — in a mechanism with structural similarities to methotrexate's biochemistry. Under metabolic stress, MOTS-C translocates from mitochondria into the cell nucleus in an AMPK-dependent manner, binding ARE-regulated transcription factors and modulating nuclear gene expression to improve cellular stress resistance and mitochondrial biogenesis.

01
AMPK Activation
MOTS-C activates AMP-activated protein kinase, the cellular energy sensor, promoting GLUT4-mediated glucose uptake and fatty acid oxidation in skeletal muscle.
02
Nuclear Translocation
Under metabolic stress, MOTS-C enters the cell nucleus and binds antioxidant response element (ARE) transcription factors, modulating gene expression and stress resistance.
03
Mitochondrial Biogenesis
MOTS-C upregulates mitochondrial biogenesis markers including PGC-1α, restoring mitochondrial respiration in metabolically compromised tissues.

Ageing and Healthspan Research

A 2021 Nature Communications study (Reynolds et al.) demonstrated MOTS-C treatment significantly enhanced physical performance in young, middle-aged, and old mice. Late-life intermittent treatment (3×/week from 23.5 months) was associated with differences in physical capacity measures in that study. MOTS-C gene polymorphisms have also been associated with human lifespan in genetic epidemiology studies.

Pancreatic islet research (Nature 2025) showed MOTS-C prevents β-cell senescence via AMPK/mTOR pathway modulation, reducing pancreatic islet senescence and improving glucose intolerance in diabetic mouse models.

Cardiovascular Research

MOTS-C has been studied in cardiac structure and function models, with data suggesting activity through the NRG1-ErbB4 pathway in preclinical settings. Functional enrichment analysis reported activity in angiogenesis, inflammation, and apoptosis pathway markers in cardiac cell culture models.

Exogenous MOTS-C treatment in type 2 diabetic rat hearts (Frontiers in Physiology, 2025) showed differences in mitochondrial respiration markers, fasted blood glucose levels, and left ventricular wall thickness measurements in that preclinical model.

Key Published Research
The Mitochondrial-Derived Peptide MOTS-c Promotes Metabolic Homeostasis and Reduces Obesity and Insulin Resistance
Cell Metabolism · 2015 · Lee et al.
Discovery paper. MOTS-C reversed diet-induced obesity and diet/age-dependent insulin resistance in mice through AMPK-driven skeletal muscle glucose uptake. First documentation of circulating MOTS-C in humans and age-dependent decline.
MOTS-c is an Exercise-Induced Mitochondrial-Encoded Regulator of Age-Dependent Physical Decline and Muscle Homeostasis
Nature Communications · January 2021 · Reynolds et al.
In preclinical mouse studies, MOTS-C-treated groups showed differences in physical capacity measures across age cohorts. Separate human exercise studies observed endogenous MOTS-C expression changes in skeletal muscle and systemic circulation during exertion.
Mitochondria-Derived Peptide MOTS-c Restores Mitochondrial Respiration in Type 2 Diabetic Heart
Frontiers in Physiology · 2025
MOTS-C treatment decreased fasted blood glucose, improved glucose handling in T2D rats, restored mitochondrial respiration, and produced 8% reduction in LV wall thickness — consistent with improved cardiac function in diabetic cardiomyopathy.
Research Context: MOTS-C is an experimental peptide with no approved therapeutic use. It is prohibited under WADA (Section 4.4 — AMPK Activators) and listed by the FDA as a compounding safety risk. Evidence is predominantly preclinical; clinical development has been limited by delivery challenges (low bioavailability, short half-life). For scientific reference only.