MOTS-C

MOTS-C is a mitochondrial-derived peptide encoded by mitochondrial DNA and studied for its role in metabolic regulation and cellular stress response signaling [1,2].

This peptide is for research purposes only. Not for human consumption.

Category:

Description

Mitochondrial Signaling Research

MOTS-C is examined for its involvement in mitochondrial-to-nuclear communication pathways [1]. Research models investigate how this peptide influences metabolic adaptation and stress-response signaling.

Metabolic Regulation Context

Studies explore MOTS-C in relation to glucose metabolism, energy sensing pathways, and cellular homeostasis under metabolic stress [2]. These investigations focus on pathway-level signaling markers.

Peptide Origin and Function

As a mitochondrially encoded peptide, MOTS-C provides a unique model for studying non-nuclear peptide signaling and cross-compartment regulation [1].

Key Specs

  • Peptide origin: mitochondrial DNA
  • Research context: metabolic and stress-response signaling
  • References: PubChem, PubMed [1,2]

Referenced Citations

  1. PubChem, MOTS-C: https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/compound/MOTS-C
  2. PubMed, Mitochondrial-derived peptides: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25686159/

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Mitochondrial Signaling Research

MOTS-C is examined for its involvement in mitochondrial-to-nuclear communication pathways [1]. Research models investigate how this peptide influences metabolic adaptation and stress-response signaling.

Metabolic Regulation Context

Studies explore MOTS-C in relation to glucose metabolism, energy sensing pathways, and cellular homeostasis under metabolic stress [2]. These investigations focus on pathway-level signaling markers.

Peptide Origin and Function

As a mitochondrially encoded peptide, MOTS-C provides a unique model for studying non-nuclear peptide signaling and cross-compartment regulation [1].

Key Specs

  • Peptide origin: mitochondrial DNA
  • Research context: metabolic and stress-response signaling
  • References: PubChem, PubMed [1,2]

Referenced Citations

  1. PubChem, MOTS-C: https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/compound/MOTS-C
  2. PubMed, Mitochondrial-derived peptides: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25686159/
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