MOTS-c partially protects against skeletal muscle loss in C26 cancer cachexia
Background
Cancer cachexia is a debilitating metabolic syndrome characterized by progressive skeletal muscle loss, reduced function, and increased mortality, significantly impacting patient prognosis. A key underlying mechanism is mitochondrial dysfunction, which drives the muscle wasting phenotype. Current treatments are limited, highlighting an urgent need for novel therapeutic strategies. MOTS-c, a mitochondrial-derived peptide, is known to regulate metabolic homeostasis and mimic exercise signaling, making it a promising candidate to counteract cachexia by targeting mitochondrial health and muscle metabolism.
Study Design
Researchers investigated MOTS-c's effects both in vitro and in vivo. In vitro, differentiated myotubes were treated with MOTS-c (50 μM) to assess intracellular signaling. For in vivo studies, male mice were inoculated with Colon-26 (C26) carcinoma cells to induce cachexia. These mice were then treated daily with MOTS-c (15 mg/kg/2x Day, i.p.) or a vehicle control. Body weight was monitored daily. At euthanasia, organ and skeletal muscle masses were measured. Molecular analyses focused on FOXO signaling, atrogene expression (MuRF1, Atrogin-1), and mitochondrial biogenesis markers, including PGC-1α.
Results
In vitro, MOTS-c significantly increased PGC-1α mRNA by +84.6% and AMPK phosphorylation by +103.1% in myotubes. In vivo, C26 tumor-bearing mice exhibited significant systemic wasting, with approximately ~9% total body weight loss. While MOTS-c did not prevent total body weight or fat loss, it remarkably preserved skeletal muscle mass. The most significant finding was:
MOTS-c rescued quadriceps weight by +12% compared to the C26 vehicle group (p < 0.05), and also showed a trend toward protecting gastrocnemius mass and EDL function. Cachexia-induced upregulation of
Atrogin-1(+8.6-fold) andMuRF1(+16-fold) was attenuated by MOTS-c. This was accompanied by an increase in inhibitorypFOXO1(+80%), a reduction inpFOXO3a(-39%), and a partial restoration ofPGC-1αprotein levels by +143%, indicating a modulation ofFOXO-driven catabolic signalingand promotion ofmitochondrial biogenesis.
Key Findings
- MOTS-c increased
PGC-1αmRNA by +84.6% andAMPKphosphorylation by +103.1% in myotubes. - MOTS-c preserved quadriceps weight by +12% in C26 cachectic mice (p < 0.05).
- Cachexia-induced
Atrogin-1(+8.6-fold) andMuRF1(+16-fold) upregulation was attenuated by MOTS-c. - MOTS-c increased inhibitory
pFOXO1(+80%) and reducedpFOXO3a(-39%). - MOTS-c partially restored
PGC-1αprotein levels by +143% in vivo.
Why It Matters
This study provides compelling preclinical evidence that MOTS-c holds therapeutic potential for mitigating skeletal muscle loss in cancer cachexia, a condition with limited effective treatments. The ability of MOTS-c to preserve muscle mass by modulating FOXO-driven catabolism and promoting mitochondrial biogenesis suggests a novel strategy to combat this debilitating syndrome. For peptide users and clinicians, this opens the door for future human trials to explore MOTS-c as an adjunctive therapy to improve quality of life and potentially enhance tolerance to cancer treatments. The specific 15 mg/kg/2x Day i.p. dose and mechanism identified provide a strong basis for developing clinically relevant protocols, though direct human translation of this animal dose requires further research.
mots-c
cancer cachexia
muscle wasting
mitochondrial biogenesis
foxo signaling
preclinical-animal