
Analysis
Discovered in 2015, MOTS-c is encoded within the mitochondrial 12S rRNA gene. Lee 2015 (Cell Metabolism) is the foundational mechanism paper; the peptide acts on AMPK and folate-cycle pathways. The human translational dossier is thin, small-cohort pilot data on glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity. Methodology v1.2 places it firmly in the research-peptide tier.
MOTS-c is a 16-amino-acid peptide encoded within the mitochondrial 12S rRNA gene. It is the most-cited example of a mitochondrial-derived peptide with a defined cytoplasmic and systemic role. Lee 2015 (Cell Metabolism) is the foundational paper: in mouse models, MOTS-c administration improved glucose tolerance, insulin sensitivity, and protected against high-fat-diet-induced obesity through AMPK pathway activation. Subsequent replications across independent labs strengthened the mechanism case and extended findings to skeletal-muscle metabolism and exercise physiology. The human data layer remains thin. A handful of small Phase 1 dose-escalation studies have been conducted but none have published Phase 2 efficacy results in peer-reviewed venues at the time of this review. Methodology v1.2 scores MOTS-c 5.9. The mechanism is strong, the human evidence is weak. The score is the gap between an interesting peptide-class story and the absence of a published trial dossier; the calibration anchor is BPC-157 (6.8) which has more preclinical depth and one published human pilot. Research-channel supply for MOTS-c is among the most quality-variable in the database. Authentic peer-grade material is available from controlled academic suppliers; the open-market grey channel is not.
Top quatre sur chaque dimension.
Plus c'est haut, mieux c'est. Chiffres tabulaires, méthodologie sur sa propre page, et oui — la fiabilité du vendeur compte parce que le risque de contrefaçon est réel.
| # | COMPOSÉ | PREUVES | MÉCANISME | HUMAIN | VENDEUR | SÉCURITÉ | TOTAL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | BPC-157 Body Protection Compound 157 | 7.8 | 8.2 | 4.0 | 6.5 | 7.0 | 6.8 |
| 2 | TB-500 Thymosin Beta-4 fragment | 6.4 | 7.5 | 3.2 | 5.8 | 6.5 | 5.9 |
| 4 | MOTS-c Mitochondrial Open-Reading-Frame of the 12S rRNA-c | 6.5 | 7.8 | 3.5 | 5.5 | 6.0 | 5.9 |
| 8 | Tesamorelin synthetic GHRH analogue (Egrifta) | 8.0 | 8.0 | 7.5 | 7.5 | 7.5 | 7.7 |
Avantages et inconvénients
| CE QUI MARCHE | CE QUI MARCHE PAS |
|---|---|
| Mechanism is genetically encoded and biologically plausible, Lee 2015 (Cell Metabolism) established the AMPK-pathway link with subsequent independent replication. | Human evidence base is small. No published Phase 2 or larger. |
| Preclinical metabolic-syndrome models (rodent) reproduce insulin-sensitising and exercise-mimetic effects. | Mitochondrial-derived peptides are a young research class, long-term safety data does not yet exist. |
| Single-ascending-dose human Phase 1 pilots (small-n) suggest a tolerability signal in metabolically-impaired adults. | Research-channel supply is highly variable in identity and purity; MOTS-c is one of the more counterfeit-prone compounds in the database. |
Alternatives testées
Trois composés issus du même comparatif.
- #1 · NOTRE CHOIX6.8BPC-157Body Protection Compound 157
The most-studied research peptide in rodents. Human evidence remains thin and the FDA narrowed its compounding pathway in 2023.
- #2 · CHOIX BUDGET5.9TB-500Thymosin Beta-4 fragment
The actin-binding biology is real; what most online sources sell as TB-500 is a fragment, not the full thymosin beta-4 protein.
- #8 · DAUPHIN7.7Tesamorelinsynthetic GHRH analogue (Egrifta)
FDA-approved GHRH analogue for HIV-associated lipodystrophy. The most-developed peptide in the GHRH/GHRP class with a regulated indication.
Références
3 cited- Lee et al. 2015, MOTS-c regulates metabolic homeostasis, Cell Metabolism
- Kim et al. 2018, MOTS-c and mitochondrial peptide signaling, Trends Endocrinol Metab
- Reynolds et al. 2021, Mitochondrial-derived peptides in human aging, Aging Cell