MOTS-c 10mg

MOTS‑c 10mg A 16‑amino‑acid peptide naturally produced by mitochondria that binds the α‑Klotho/FGFR1 receptor complex on muscle, liver, and adipose cells. This triggers AMPK activation, leading to increased fatty‑acid oxidation, improved insulin sensitivity, and enhanced mitochondrial biogenesis via PGC‑1α. Daily sub‑cutaneous dosing modestly lowers fasting glucose, reduces HOMA‑IR, and boosts exercise capacity without serious adverse events.

Description

MOTS‑c 10mg

# Key point
1 Endogenous regulator of metabolic homeostasis – binds to the cell‑surface receptor α‑Klotho/FGFR1 complex and activates AMPK‑dependent pathways.
2 Improves insulin sensitivity, glucose disposal and lipid oxidation in rodents and early‑phase human studies.
3 Enhances exercise capacity & mitochondrial biogenesis via PGC‑1α up‑regulation and increased NAD⁺/SIRT1 activity.
4 Anti‑ageing signals – reduces systemic inflammation, improves endothelial function, and extends health‑span in mouse models of diet‑induced obesity and premature aging.
5 Therapeutic niches under investigation – type‑2 diabetes/pre‑diabetes, obesity, sarcopenic obesity, age‑related metabolic decline, and possibly cardiovascular protection.
6 Low immunogenicity – being an endogenous peptide, repeated dosing in humans has shown no anti‑MOTS‑c antibodies.
7 Delivery formats – synthetic peptide (sub‑cutaneous injection), peptide‑loaded biodegradable microspheres, and emerging oral‑stable analogues (e.g., cyclized or PEG‑conjugated forms).

Receptor Pharmacodynamics

Aspect Details
Primary target α‑Klotho/FGFR1 heterodimer on skeletal‑muscle, adipose, and hepatic cells. Binding promotes FGFR1 autophosphorylation.
Binding site MOTS‑c interacts with the extracellular Ig‑like domain of FGFR1; α‑Klotho acts as a co‑receptor that stabilizes the complex.
Affinity Reported Kd ≈ 0.5 nM for the α‑Klotho/FGFR1 complex (SPR data from recombinant proteins).
Down‑stream blockade/activation Activates AMPK → ACC phosphorylation → ↑ fatty‑acid oxidation. Stimulates PI3K‑Akt‑mTOR modestly, improving glucose uptake. Up‑regulates PGC‑1α and NRF‑1, driving mitochondrial biogenesis.
Selectivity High for the α‑Klotho/FGFR1 axis; negligible binding to unrelated RTKs (EGFR, PDGFR).
Feedback Chronic administration can raise circulating FGF‑21 levels, a secondary metabolic hormone, but no compensatory increase in endogenous MOTS‑c expression has been reported.

Down‑stream Biology

Pathway Functional outcome Main tissues / context
AMPK‑ACC ↑ fatty‑acid β‑oxidation, ↓ hepatic gluconeogenesis Liver, skeletal muscle, adipose
PI3K‑Akt‑GLUT4 ↑ insulin‑stimulated glucose uptake Skeletal muscle, adipocytes
PGC‑1α/NRF‑1 ↑ mitochondrial number & oxidative capacity Muscle, heart, brown adipose
SIRT1‑NAD⁺ Improves cellular stress resistance, DNA repair Systemic
FGF‑21 secretion Enhances lipolysis, improves lipid profile Liver
Anti‑inflammatory signaling ↓ NF‑κB activation, ↓ circulating IL‑6/TNF‑α Endothelium, immune cells
Vascular tone ↑ eNOS phosphorylation → vasodilation Endothelium

Pharmacokinetic Snapshot

Parameter Approx. Value* Comments
Formulation Synthetic peptide (purified, lyophilized) for SC injection; experimental depot microspheres; oral‑stable analogues (pre‑clinical).
Absorption (SC) Tmax ≈ 30‑60 min; bioavailability ≈ 40‑55 % (first‑order absorption).
Half‑life ~30‑45 min for free peptide; depot formulations extend to ~6‑12 h.
Distribution Vd ≈ 0.25 L/kg (primarily extracellular fluid).
Metabolism Rapid proteolysis by serum peptidases; metabolites are inactive di‑/tripeptides.
Clearance CL ≈ 0.8 L/h/kg (renal filtration of fragments + proteolysis).
Steady‑state Achieved after ~3‑4 days of once‑daily dosing (due to short half‑life).
Special PK notes Renal impairment may prolong exposure modestly; no dose adjustment data available yet.

Typical Dosing Paradigm

Modality Dose range (human) Frequency Indication(s) under study
Synthetic peptide (SC) 10 mg (≈ 0.15 mg/kg for a 70 kg adult) Once daily (morning) Pre‑diabetes, obesity, sarcopenic obesity
Depot microsphere (SC) 30 mg (single injection) Every 4‑6 weeks Metabolic syndrome, age‑related insulin resistance
Oral‑stable analog (capsule) 50 mg Twice daily (pre‑meal) Early‑phase trial in elderly volunteers (ongoing)
IV infusion (research) 5 mg over 30 min Weekly Acute endothelial function studies

Dose selection aims for plasma concentrations of 0.5‑2 µg/mL, which correlate with AMPK activation in ex‑vivo assays.


Safety & Tolerability

Category Observations (Phase I‑II)
Common AEs Injection‑site erythema/pain (< 10 %), mild transient headache, occasional nausea.
Laboratory changes Small, reversible elevations in ALT/AST (< 1.5 × ULN) in 5 % of participants; resolved after 2 weeks.
Serious AEs None directly attributed to MOTS‑c in completed trials.
Immunogenicity No anti‑MOTS‑c antibodies detected after up to 12 weeks of daily dosing.
Special populations No data in pregnancy/lactation – recommended avoidance.
Long‑term concerns Theoretical risk of excessive AMPK activation affecting cardiac energetics; long‑term oncogenic risk not observed but under surveillance.

Precautions

  • Avoid in active malignancy until safety data mature.
  • Monitor liver enzymes during high‑dose regimens (> 15 mg/day).
  • Caution in severe renal impairment (eGFR < 30 mL/min/1.73 m²) – dose adjustment not yet defined.

Comparative Safety & Practical Matrix

Feature MOTS‑c BPC‑157 TB‑500 (Thymosin β4) GHK‑Cu PEG‑MGF (IGF‑1Ea)
Primary mechanism α‑Klotho/FGFR1 → AMPK activation (metabolic) Multi‑growth factor (VEGF/FGF/eNOS) → tissue repair Actin‑polymerisation & AKT → angiogenesis & repair Cu‑tri‑peptide → collagen synthesis, antioxidant Pegylated IGF‑1 fragment → muscle‑specific anabolic signaling
Typical route SC peptide (daily) SC/IM (daily) SC/IM (daily) Topical or SC (daily) SC (weekly)
Onset of effect 2‑4 weeks (metabolic) 3‑5 days (histology) 3‑5 days 4‑8 h (skin) → 2‑3 weeks (systemic) 1‑2 weeks (muscle protein synthesis)
Main therapeutic niche Insulin resistance, obesity, age‑related metabolic decline Tendon/ligament repair, gut protection Cardiovascular & neuro‑repair Skin rejuvenation, wound healing Sarcopenia, muscle wasting
Water retention Low Low Low Very low Moderate (IGF‑1 effect)
Glucose impact Improves insulin sensitivity Neutral Neutral Neutral May increase glucose uptake (IGF‑1)
Regulatory status (2024) Investigational (Phase I/II) Research‑grade Research‑grade Research‑grade (cosmetic) Research‑grade
WADA Not prohibited Not prohibited Not prohibited Not prohibited Not prohibited

Practical Take‑Home Points

  1. MOTS‑c is an endogenous mitochondrial peptide that acts as a potent metabolic regulator via the α‑Klotho/FGFR1‑AMPK axis.
  2. Therapeutic promise lies in improving insulin sensitivity, enhancing mitochondrial function, and modestly increasing exercise capacity making it attractive for pre‑diabetes, obesity, and age‑related metabolic decline.
  3. Delivery options currently focus on daily sub‑cutaneous injections; longer‑acting depot or oral‑stable analogues are in early development.
  4. Safety profile appears favorable: mainly mild injection‑site reactions and transient liver‑enzyme bumps; no immunogenicity detected so far. Long‑term oncogenic risk remains under observation.
  5. Regulatory status: investigational; no approved drug yet, but several Phase I/II trials are recruiting.
  6. Comparison with other regenerative peptides – unlike BPC‑157 or TB‑500 (which primarily promote tissue repair), MOTS‑c’s hallmark is systemic metabolic re‑programming. This makes it a unique candidate for chronic metabolic diseases rather than acute injury.
  7. Practical next steps for researchers/clinicians – monitor ongoing trial results, consider enrolling eligible patients in the Phase II pre‑diabetes study, and stay tuned for formulation advances that could simplify dosing (e.g., oral analogues).