MOTS-C та AMPK: механізм жироспалення
Опубліковано: 2025-07-23 08:41:00 | PEPTEX Research

You drag yourself to the gym, grind through a session, track macros, and still the scale barely moves. Meanwhile, some people seem to burn fat sitting in traffic. Unfair? Sure. But the gap might have less to do with willpower and more to do with a mitochondrial peptide most people have never heard of.
MOTS-c (Mitochondrial Open Reading Frame of the Twelve S rRNA type-c) is a 16-amino-acid peptide encoded in mitochondrial DNA. Unlike most signaling molecules that come from nuclear genes, MOTS-c originates from the cell's energy factories themselves. And its primary target is AMPK -- the master metabolic switch that decides whether your body stores energy or burns it.
AMPK: the switch you want flipped ON
AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) sits at the center of cellular energy regulation. When activated, it does three things that matter for fat loss:
- Fatty acid oxidation goes up. AMPK phosphorylates acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC), reducing malonyl-CoA levels. Malonyl-CoA normally blocks CPT1, the enzyme that shuttles fatty acids into mitochondria for burning. Remove that block and fat oxidation accelerates.
- Glucose uptake increases independently of insulin. AMPK triggers GLUT4 translocation to the cell membrane via a pathway that doesn't require insulin receptor signaling. This matters enormously for insulin-resistant individuals whose cells basically ignore normal glucose signals.
- New mitochondria get built. AMPK activates PGC-1alpha, the master regulator of mitochondrial biogenesis. More mitochondria means higher basal energy expenditure -- you burn more calories doing nothing.
Exercise activates AMPK. So does caloric restriction. And so does MOTS-c.
How MOTS-c flips the switch
Lee et al. (2015) published the foundational paper on MOTS-c in Cell Metabolism. The team at the University of Southern California demonstrated that MOTS-c activates AMPK by interfering with the folate cycle and de novo purine biosynthesis. Specifically, MOTS-c inhibits the enzyme ATIC (5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide ribonucleotide formyltransferase), which leads to accumulation of the intermediate AICAR.
Why does AICAR matter? It's a direct AMPK activator. Pharmaceutical AICAR has been used in research as an "exercise mimetic" for years. MOTS-c essentially forces cells to produce their own AICAR, triggering AMPK activation from the inside rather than flooding the system with an external compound.
The result in that 2015 study: mice treated with MOTS-c on a high-fat diet showed significantly less weight gain, lower fat mass, improved glucose tolerance, and enhanced fatty acid metabolism compared to controls eating the same diet. They were eating the same junk food. The difference was metabolic efficiency.
Exercise mimetic -- but what does that actually mean?
The phrase "exercise mimetic" gets thrown around loosely. MOTS-c earns it more than most compounds. Reynolds et al. (2021) showed that MOTS-c levels naturally rise during exercise in humans, particularly during high-intensity efforts. It translocates from the mitochondria to the nucleus during metabolic stress, directly regulating gene expression related to antioxidant defense and glucose metabolism.
Think about that mechanism: the peptide physically moves from the power plant to the control room during exertion. It's not just a passive byproduct of exercise -- it's an active mediator of exercise adaptations.
In aged mice (equivalent to roughly 65-year-old humans), MOTS-c administration improved physical capacity on treadmill tests and restored metabolic markers to levels seen in younger animals. The effect was especially pronounced in skeletal muscle, where AMPK activation drove increased glucose uptake and improved mitochondrial function.
The insulin sensitivity angle
Fat loss isn't just about burning more calories. It's about fixing the hormonal environment that promotes fat storage. Insulin resistance is the biggest single metabolic obstacle for most people struggling to lose body fat.
MOTS-c attacks this from multiple directions:
- Direct GLUT4 activation through AMPK means cells absorb glucose without needing high insulin levels. Lower circulating insulin means less lipogenesis (fat creation from glucose).
- Reduced hepatic gluconeogenesis. AMPK activation in liver cells suppresses the enzymes responsible for producing glucose from non-carbohydrate sources. This lowers fasting blood sugar and reduces the insulin spikes needed to manage it.
- Improved skeletal muscle metabolism. Muscle is the largest glucose disposal site in the body. When muscle cells respond better to insulin (or bypass insulin entirely via AMPK), systemic insulin sensitivity improves across all tissues.
In Lee's 2015 data, MOTS-c-treated mice maintained normal glucose tolerance even on a high-fat diet -- a finding that suggests the peptide can partially decouple metabolic health from dietary perfection.
Mitochondrial biogenesis: the compounding effect
Here's where MOTS-c separates from short-term fat-burning tricks. Through sustained AMPK activation and PGC-1alpha upregulation, the peptide promotes the creation of new mitochondria. This is the metabolic equivalent of adding engines to a car.
Each new mitochondrion increases the cell's capacity to oxidize fatty acids and produce ATP. Over time, this shifts the body's fuel preference toward fat. People with higher mitochondrial density tend to have higher resting metabolic rates, better exercise endurance, and greater metabolic flexibility -- the ability to switch between burning carbs and fat depending on availability.
This is why exercise gets easier over time: your cells literally build more machinery for energy production. MOTS-c accelerates this process through the same AMPK pathway that endurance training activates.
Practical application: what the research supports
Most published studies use MOTS-c at doses between 5 and 15 mg/kg in murine models, administered via intraperitoneal injection. Human dosing hasn't been established through large-scale clinical trials, but based on allometric scaling and emerging clinical observations, researchers typically reference ranges of 5-10 mg administered subcutaneously.
Timing appears to matter. Given that MOTS-c naturally rises during exercise, pre-workout administration aligns with the peptide's endogenous rhythm. Some protocols use daily dosing for 4-8 week cycles, though the optimal duration is still being investigated.
A few things MOTS-c is NOT:
- It's not a replacement for exercise. It mimics some metabolic benefits of exercise, but structured physical activity produces mechanical and neurological adaptations that no peptide replicates.
- It's not a license to eat trash. The mice in Lee's study gained less weight on a high-fat diet, but they still gained some. Better metabolic efficiency doesn't neutralize a caloric surplus forever.
- It's not a stimulant. MOTS-c doesn't increase heart rate, cause jitteriness, or interfere with sleep. Its mechanism is entirely metabolic, operating through enzymatic pathways rather than sympathetic nervous system activation.
Who benefits most
Based on the existing research, the strongest case for MOTS-c supplementation exists for:
- People over 35 with declining mitochondrial function. MOTS-c levels naturally decrease with age. Supplementation restores a signal that the body produces less of over time.
- Individuals with insulin resistance or prediabetes. The AMPK-mediated glucose uptake pathway offers a mechanism of action that doesn't depend on functional insulin signaling.
- Anyone who exercises but plateaus on fat loss. MOTS-c adds metabolic throughput that complements physical training rather than replacing it.
- People recovering from periods of inactivity. The mitochondrial biogenesis effect helps rebuild metabolic capacity that atrophies during sedentary periods.
Stacking and synergy
MOTS-c pairs logically with other interventions targeting the same metabolic axis. Berberine, another AMPK activator, operates through a different upstream mechanism (inhibiting Complex I of the electron transport chain). Some practitioners combine both for additive AMPK activation, though research on this specific combination is limited.
Time-restricted eating naturally elevates AMPK during fasting windows. Adding MOTS-c during the fasting period -- particularly before fasted training -- layers three AMPK-activating signals: caloric restriction, exercise, and exogenous peptide stimulation.
Getting started with MOTS-c
Peptex carries MOTS-C in lyophilized vial form for those comfortable with reconstitution and subcutaneous injection. For convenience, the MOTS-C pen offers pre-dosed administration without the preparation steps -- useful for travel or anyone who prefers simplicity.
Both formats contain the same synthetic MOTS-c peptide with third-party purity verification. The vial format allows more flexible dosing; the pen format eliminates measuring and mixing entirely.
If you're evaluating whether MOTS-c fits your current protocol, have specific questions about combining it with other peptides, or want help with dosing, reach out through Peptex support. The team responds within a few hours.
This article is for informational and educational purposes only. MOTS-c is sold as a research compound. Con...
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