Rodent study demonstrating that 4–8 weeks of voluntary running increases MOTS-c protein expression 1.5–5-fold in multiple muscle groups (plantaris, gastrocnemius, tibialis anterior) with levels sustained during 4–6 weeks of detraining, and that a single dose of exogenous MOTS-c acutely improves exercise performance in mice. Characterized both chronic muscle MOTS-c adaptation and acute performance-enhancing effects. Establishes the temporal dynamics of exercise-induced muscle MOTS-c accumulation—showing that training-induced MOTS-c elevation persists beyond the exercise period and that exogenous MOTS-c can acutely enhance exercise capacity, providing a mechanistic bridge between endurance training and MOTS-c's ergogenic effects.
Hyatt, Jon-Philippe K