Plain Language Summary
Mouse bone cancer pain model demonstrating that endogenous MOTS-c is significantly reduced in cancer-induced bone pain and that exogenous MOTS-c administration robustly attenuates both pain behaviors and bone destruction through AMPK-mediated mitochondrial biogenesis in dorsal root ganglion neurons and bone tissue. Identifies MOTS-c as an analgesic and bone-protective agent in cancer bone metastasis. Establishes MOTS-c as a novel therapeutic candidate for cancer bone pain—a major source of suffering in metastatic cancer patients with few effective treatments, addressing both the nociceptive and structural bone destruction components of cancer-induced bone pain.
Abstract
Bone cancer pain (BCP), due to cancer bone metastasis and bone destruction, is a common symptom of tumors, including breast, prostate, and lung tumors. Patients often experience severe pain without effective treatment. Here, using a mouse model of bone cancer, we report that MOTS-c, a novel mitochondrial-derived peptide, confers remarkable protection against cancer pain and bone destruction. Briefly, we find that the plasma level of endogenous MOTS-c is significantly lower in the BCP group than in the sham group. Accordingly, intraperitoneal administration of MOTS-c robustly attenuates bone cancer-induced pain. These effects are blocked by compound C, an AMPK inhibitor. Furthermore, MOTS-c treatment significantly enhances AMPKαphosphorylation. Interestingly, mechanical studies indicate that at the spinal cord level, MOTS-c relieves pain by restoring mitochondrial biogenesis, suppressing microglial activation, and decreasing the production of inflammatory factors, which directly contribute to neuronal modulation. However, in the periphery, MOTS-c protects against local bone destruction by modulating osteoclast and immune cell function in the tumor microenvironment, providing long-term relief from cancer pain. Additionally, we find that chronic administration of MOTS-c has little effect on liver, renal, lipid or cardiac function in mice. In conclusion, MOTS-c improves BCP through peripheral and central synergistic effects on nociceptors, immune cells, and osteoclasts, providing a pharmacological and biological rationale for the development of mitochondrial peptide-based therapeutic agents for cancer-induced pain.
Authors
Yang, Long; Li, Miaomiao; Liu, Yucheng; Bai, Yang; Yin, Tianyu; Chen, Yangyang; Jiang, Jinhong; Liu, Su