Mouse study in a radiation pneumonitis model (20 Gy thoracic irradiation) demonstrating that daily intraperitoneal MOTS-c significantly reduced lung tissue damage, inflammation, and oxidative stress through an Nrf2-dependent mechanism, reducing radiation-induced epithelial injury and fibrotic remodeling. Extends MOTS-c's radioprotective evidence to the lung. Establishes MOTS-c as a potential pharmacological agent for preventing radiation pneumonitis—a dose-limiting complication of thoracic radiotherapy that currently lacks effective preventive therapies—through Nrf2-mediated protection of lung epithelial mitochondrial function.
Zhang, Yanli; Huang, Jianfeng; Zhang, Yaru; Jiang, Fengjuan; Li, Shengpeng; He, Shuai; Sun, Jiaojiao; Chen, Dan; Tong, Ying; Pang, Qingfeng; Wu, Yaxian