Tag Archives: MOTS-c

MOTS-c: Complete Research Guide to the Mitochondrial-Derived Peptide

MOTS-c

Research Use Only Notice: MOTS-c is a research peptide intended for in-vitro and animal research applications only. It is not FDA-approved as a drug or therapy. Nothing in this article constitutes medical advice, treatment recommendation, or guidance for human consumption.

MOTS-c is a 16-amino-acid mitochondrial-derived peptide that has become a focal compound in modern metabolic and longevity research. Unlike most synthetic research peptides, MOTS-c is encoded by mitochondrial DNA rather than nuclear DNA — making it one of a small group of “mitochondrial-derived peptides” (MDPs) discovered relatively recently. Research has documented MOTS-c influencing insulin sensitivity, mitochondrial biogenesis, exercise-mimetic effects, and metabolic biomarker panels in animal models. This complete guide from the chemistry team at OPS Peptide Science walks through what MOTS-c is, how the mitochondrial-origin mechanism works, and where it sits in the broader research catalog.

For the foundational research-workflow protocols, see our companion guides on how to reconstitute peptides, how to inject peptides, and peptide storage and refrigeration.

What Is MOTS-c?

MOTS-c (Mitochondrial Open reading frame of the Twelve S rRNA-c) is a 16-amino-acid peptide encoded within the human mitochondrial 12S rRNA gene. The mitochondrial origin is biologically unusual — most peptides studied in research are encoded by nuclear DNA, while MOTS-c emerges from the small genome that mitochondria carry as a relic of their evolutionary origin as separate organisms.

Key facts about MOTS-c:

  • Chemical class — 16-amino-acid mitochondrial-derived peptide (MDP)
  • Molecular weight — approximately 2174 Da
  • Source — encoded by mitochondrial DNA (12S rRNA region), not nuclear DNA
  • Sequence — Met-Arg-Trp-Gln-Glu-Met-Gly-Tyr-Ile-Phe-Tyr-Pro-Arg-Lys-Leu-Arg (MRWQEMGYIFYPRKLR)
  • Form — typically supplied as lyophilized powder; reconstituted with bacteriostatic water
  • Half-life — relatively short; research models use frequent dosing
  • Stability — stable at -20°C as lyophilized powder for 18-24 months

The mitochondrial origin makes MOTS-c part of a small but growing class of research compounds — mitochondrial-derived peptides (MDPs). Other MDPs include humanin and the SHLP (small humanin-like peptide) family. MOTS-c is the most-studied of this group due to its metabolic effects.

MOTS-c

MOTS-c Structure and Chemistry

MOTS-c’s structure is unusual for a peptide research compound:

  • 16 amino acids — small enough for synthetic production at high purity
  • Encoded by mitochondrial 12S rRNA — an unusual coding location for a functional peptide
  • Naturally produced — research has documented endogenous MOTS-c in human and animal tissues, particularly in muscle
  • Levels respond to exercise — published research has measured MOTS-c rising with exercise, supporting the “exercise-mimetic” research framing
  • Levels decline with age — like many bioactive peptides, MOTS-c concentrations decrease in older subjects

The age-related decline and exercise-induced increase are what make MOTS-c interesting as a research target — both findings suggest MOTS-c is part of the cellular machinery that responds to metabolic stress and aging. Studying exogenous MOTS-c administration probes whether supplementing the natural decline produces measurable effects on the same pathways.

How MOTS-c Works in Research (Mechanism)

The MOTS-c mechanism is one of the better-characterized in modern research peptide science. Documented pathways include:

  • AMPK activation — MOTS-c activates AMP-activated protein kinase, a central cellular energy sensor that regulates metabolism
  • Folate-methionine cycle modulation — research has documented effects on one-carbon metabolism, which sits upstream of multiple cellular pathways
  • Mitochondrial biogenesis — induces new mitochondrial formation in research models, increasing cellular mitochondrial density
  • Glucose homeostasis — improves insulin sensitivity and glucose disposal in animal research models
  • Skeletal muscle metabolism — particularly active in muscle tissue, where MOTS-c affects glucose uptake and fatty acid oxidation
  • Mitochondrial-nuclear signaling — MOTS-c travels from mitochondria to nucleus, where it influences gene expression

The AMPK activation mechanism positions MOTS-c alongside compounds like metformin in mechanistic research — both activate AMPK, though through different upstream signals. The mitochondrial-nuclear signaling component is particularly novel for research peptides — MOTS-c demonstrates that mitochondria don’t just produce energy; they also send signaling molecules that influence nuclear gene expression. The published MOTS-c research literature on PubMed documents these mechanisms across the past decade of investigation.

MOTS-c Research Applications

Metabolic Research

The largest body of MOTS-c research focuses on metabolic endpoints — insulin sensitivity, glucose tolerance, lipid profiles, and broader metabolic biomarker panels. Animal models studying type 2 diabetes biology, metabolic syndrome research, and obesity-related metabolic disorders have produced consistent MOTS-c data across multiple studies.

Exercise-Mimetic Research

Because endogenous MOTS-c rises with exercise, the compound has been studied as a potential “exercise mimetic” — producing some of exercise’s metabolic effects without physical activity. Research models have documented MOTS-c effects on muscle glucose uptake, mitochondrial biogenesis, and aerobic capacity markers that overlap with exercise adaptations.

MOTS-c

Mitochondrial Biology Research

MOTS-c is one of the central research compounds in mitochondrial biology — investigating mitochondrial-nuclear communication, mitochondrial biogenesis pathways, and mitochondrial dysfunction in aging and disease models. The compound’s mitochondrial origin makes it uniquely positioned as a research probe for mitochondrial signaling.

Aging and Longevity Research

The age-related decline in endogenous MOTS-c has driven longevity research applications. Studies have measured effects on aging-related biomarkers, healthspan endpoints, and mitochondrial function across age cohorts in animal models. MOTS-c sits alongside SS-31, NAD+ precursors, and other mitochondrial compounds in the longevity research portfolio.

Bone Research

Emerging research area — MOTS-c has been documented in bone biology research models, with effects on osteoblast activity and bone density markers. This area is smaller than the metabolic research but growing.

MOTS-c Dosing in Research Models

Research dosing patterns for MOTS-c in published studies:

  • Subcutaneous or intraperitoneal injection — both routes appear in published animal research
  • Daily dosing common — short half-life supports daily administration in most protocols
  • Cycle-based protocols — some research designs use 4-12 week dosing cycles with washout periods
  • Dose amounts — typically reported in mg/kg body weight in animal research; specific protocols vary by species and endpoint
  • Endpoint timelines — metabolic endpoints typically measured at 4-8 weeks; longevity endpoints over longer durations

Research protocols should reference published methodology for the specific research model. The acute vs. cumulative effect timeline distinction is addressed in our guide on how long does it take for peptides to work.

MOTS-c Storage and Stability

MOTS-c stability is comparable to other small lyophilized research peptides:

Storage ConditionFormStability Window
-80°CLyophilized powder3-5+ years
-20°CLyophilized powder18-24 months
2-8°CLyophilized powder6-12 months
2-8°CReconstituted in BAC water21-28 days
Room temperatureLyophilized powder2-4 weeks for transit

For practical storage protocols, see our guide on how long do peptides last at room temperature.

MOTS-c vs SS-31 and Other Mitochondrial Compounds

Several research compounds target mitochondrial biology. Brief comparison:

CompoundTypeMechanismPrimary Research Focus
MOTS-cMitochondrial-derived peptideAMPK activation, gene expressionMetabolism, insulin sensitivity, exercise mimicry
SS-31 (elamipretide)Synthetic peptideCardiolipin binding, membrane stabilizationCardiac, neurodegeneration, mitochondrial membrane
HumaninMitochondrial-derived peptideAnti-apoptotic, cytoprotectiveNeurodegeneration, cell survival
NAD+ precursorsSmall moleculeNAD+ pool expansionSirtuin activation, aging biology

MOTS-c and SS-31 are the two most-cited mitochondrial peptides in modern research. They address different aspects of mitochondrial biology — MOTS-c affects gene expression and metabolic signaling, SS-31 stabilizes the inner mitochondrial membrane. Many research designs use them in parallel rather than as alternatives.

How to Identify Quality Research-Grade MOTS-c

Quality criteria for research-grade MOTS-c:

  • 99%+ HPLC-MS verified purity — small peptide synthesis is generally manageable, but verification is essential for reproducible research
  • Per-lot Certificate of Analysis — each batch independently tested
  • Mass spectrometry identity confirmation — confirms molecular weight matches MOTS-c (~2174 Da)
  • Chain-of-custody documentation — traceable from manufacturer through fulfillment
  • Properly lyophilized appearance — clean white cake at the bottom of the vial
  • Research-use-only labeling — required by US regulations

At OPS Peptide Science, every MOTS-c vial ships with a unique BIOVIRIDIAN COA code. Customers can verify the Certificate of Analysis for their specific lot — confirming purity and identity before opening the vial.

MOTS-c

MOTS-c Regulatory Status

MOTS-c sits in standard research-peptide regulatory territory:

  • Not FDA-approved — has not completed clinical trials required for human drug approval
  • Legal as research chemical — sold in the US for in-vitro and animal research under research-use-only labeling
  • Not WADA-prohibited — as of current updates, MOTS-c is not on the WADA Prohibited List, though this could change with future updates
  • Not DEA-scheduled — no controlled substance status
  • Newer compound — discovered around 2015, so regulatory frameworks are still adapting

For the complete legal framework around research peptides, see our detailed guide on are peptides illegal. According to NIH research literature, MOTS-c remains an active area of pre-clinical investigation, particularly in metabolic and longevity contexts.

FAQ

What is MOTS-c?

MOTS-c is a 16-amino-acid peptide encoded by mitochondrial DNA (specifically the 12S rRNA gene). It is one of a small class of “mitochondrial-derived peptides” (MDPs). Research has documented effects on insulin sensitivity, mitochondrial biogenesis, AMPK activation, and metabolic biomarker panels across animal research models.

What makes MOTS-c different from other peptides?

Two things. First, MOTS-c is encoded by mitochondrial DNA rather than nuclear DNA — unusual for a peptide. Second, MOTS-c demonstrates mitochondrial-nuclear signaling, where mitochondria send a peptide that influences nuclear gene expression. These features make MOTS-c a unique research probe for mitochondrial biology.

How does MOTS-c work?

MOTS-c activates AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), a central cellular energy sensor. AMPK activation produces downstream effects on glucose uptake, fatty acid oxidation, mitochondrial biogenesis, and metabolic gene expression. MOTS-c also modulates folate-methionine cycle activity and travels from mitochondria to nucleus to influence gene expression directly.

Is MOTS-c an exercise mimetic?

Some research uses this framing because endogenous MOTS-c levels rise with exercise. Animal research has documented overlap between MOTS-c administration and exercise-induced adaptations — muscle glucose uptake, mitochondrial biogenesis, aerobic capacity markers. This doesn’t mean MOTS-c replaces exercise; it suggests both engage similar metabolic pathways.

What’s the difference between MOTS-c and SS-31?

Both target mitochondria but through different mechanisms. MOTS-c is mitochondrial-encoded and acts through AMPK and gene expression. SS-31 is a synthetic peptide that binds cardiolipin in the mitochondrial membrane, providing structural stabilization. Research often uses them as complementary tools — MOTS-c for signaling/metabolic endpoints, SS-31 for membrane and bioenergetics endpoints.

Is MOTS-c legal in the US?

Yes — MOTS-c is legally sold in the US as a research chemical for in-vitro and animal research under research-use-only labeling. It is not FDA-approved and is not currently on the WADA Prohibited List. See our detailed guide on are peptides illegal for the full framework.

Where can I buy research-grade MOTS-c?

Research-grade MOTS-c is sold by research peptide suppliers operating under research-use-only labeling. Quality criteria include 99%+ HPLC-MS verified purity, per-lot Certificates of Analysis, mass spectrometry identity confirmation, and traceable chain-of-custody. Browse the OPS Peptide Science catalog for verified research-grade MOTS-c.


MOTS-c represents a new class of research peptides — mitochondrial-derived peptides that demonstrate mitochondria-nuclear signaling. The AMPK activation mechanism, exercise-mimetic profile, and metabolic effects make MOTS-c one of the most cited compounds in modern metabolic and longevity research. For researchers studying mitochondrial biology, insulin sensitivity, or aging endpoints, MOTS-c is among the most-referenced peptides in the modern research catalog.

For research-grade MOTS-c backed by per-lot Certificates of Analysis and full HPLC-MS purity documentation, browse the OPS Peptide Science catalog, visit the OPS Peptide Science homepage for the full product overview, or verify a specific lot using its COA code.

Author: Shane Straight, Principal Chemist, OPS Peptide Science
Reviewed: May 2026

Peptides for Anti-Aging & Longevity: Complete Research Guide

Peptides for Anti-Aging

Research Use Only Notice: The compounds discussed in this guide are research peptides intended for in-vitro and animal research applications only. None are FDA-approved for therapeutic human use. Nothing in this article constitutes medical advice or guidance for human longevity protocols.

Peptides for anti-aging and longevity research span several distinct compound families — telomere-related sequences, growth hormone secretagogues, mitochondrial peptides, copper-binding tripeptides, and immune-modulating compounds. Each acts through a different biological pathway, and each is studied for different aspects of cellular and organismal aging in research models. This guide from the chemistry team at OPS Peptide Science walks through the six most-studied anti-aging research peptides — Epitalon, CJC-1295 + Ipamorelin, MOTS-c, SS-31, GHK-Cu, and Thymosin Alpha-1 — including their proposed mechanisms and current research status.

For practical research workflow guidance, see our companion posts on how to reconstitute peptides, how to inject peptides, and peptide stability and storage.

What Are Anti-Aging Peptides? Research Categories

The category “anti-aging peptides” is a functional grouping rather than a chemical one. Research compounds fall into this bucket when they’re studied for endpoints related to:

  • Telomere length and replicative senescence — markers of cellular aging at the chromosomal level
  • Mitochondrial function — energy production efficiency that declines with age
  • Growth hormone axis modulation — endocrine pathways that decline across adulthood
  • Cellular repair and regeneration — gene expression patterns associated with younger biological states
  • Immunosenescence — age-related decline in immune function
  • Oxidative stress and reactive oxygen species — molecular damage accumulating with age

Each of the peptides in this guide is studied within one or more of these research framings. None are FDA-approved as anti-aging therapeutics — they exist within the research-chemical pathway, sold to laboratories under research-use-only labeling.

The broader longevity-peptide research literature is searchable through PubMed’s aging and peptide research database.

Peptides for Anti-Aging

Epitalon — Pineal and Telomere Research

Epitalon is a four-amino-acid synthetic peptide (Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly) developed from research on pineal gland extracts. It has the most published research among peptides studied specifically for telomere-related endpoints in aging models.

Research applications documented:

  • Telomerase activation in cell culture studies
  • Telomere length measurements in animal aging models
  • Melatonin synthesis modulation through pineal effects
  • Circadian rhythm research
  • Antioxidant marker changes in research subjects

Proposed mechanism: Research literature describes Epitalon as a peptide regulator of pineal gland function with downstream effects on telomerase activity. The mechanism is studied primarily through Russian research programs spanning several decades; Western research has reproduced portions of these findings but the full mechanism remains incompletely characterized.

Research administration: Subcutaneous injection in animal research models. Short half-life leads to daily or twice-daily dosing in most published protocols. Cycle-based research designs (10–20 day cycles with washout periods) are common.

Regulatory status: Not FDA-approved. Available legally as a research chemical with research-use-only labeling.

CJC-1295 + Ipamorelin — Growth Hormone Axis

CJC-1295 and Ipamorelin are commonly studied as a combined growth hormone secretagogue protocol. CJC-1295 is a growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) analog; Ipamorelin is a growth hormone-releasing peptide (GHRP). The two act on different receptors but converge on the same downstream pathway — increased pulsatile growth hormone release.

Research applications documented:

  • Growth hormone release studies in animal and human research
  • IGF-1 trajectory studies
  • Body composition research in aging models
  • Sleep quality research (growth hormone is closely linked to slow-wave sleep)
  • Bone density studies

Proposed mechanism: CJC-1295 binds GHRH receptors on somatotrophs in the anterior pituitary; Ipamorelin binds the ghrelin/GHS-R receptor. Combined administration produces additive growth hormone release compared to either alone. The mechanism is well-characterized — these are among the most-studied growth hormone secretagogues in research literature.

Research administration: Subcutaneous injection in research models, typically before sleep to align with natural growth hormone release patterns. Cycle-based protocols are common in research designs.

Regulatory status: Not FDA-approved. WADA prohibited in athletic competition. Available legally as a research chemical with research-use-only labeling.

Peptides for Anti-Aging

MOTS-c — Mitochondrial-Derived Peptide

MOTS-c is a 16-amino-acid peptide encoded by mitochondrial DNA rather than nuclear DNA — making it one of a small group of mitochondrial-derived peptides identified in modern research. It has become a focal compound in metabolic and aging research over the past decade.

Research applications documented:

  • Insulin sensitivity studies in animal models
  • Mitochondrial biogenesis research
  • Glucose homeostasis
  • Skeletal muscle metabolism in aging models
  • Exercise mimicry research — MOTS-c levels rise with exercise in published studies

Proposed mechanism: MOTS-c appears to act through AMPK activation and modulation of folate-methionine cycles, with downstream effects on cellular energy metabolism. The mitochondrial origin makes it distinct from nuclearly-encoded peptides and has driven research interest in mitochondrial-nuclear signaling more broadly.

Research administration: Subcutaneous or intraperitoneal injection in animal research models. Dosing protocols vary across published studies.

Regulatory status: Not FDA-approved. Available as a research chemical with research-use-only labeling.

SS-31 (Elamipretide) — Mitochondrial Membrane Peptide

SS-31, also known as elamipretide, is a small synthetic peptide that targets the inner mitochondrial membrane through cardiolipin binding. Unlike MOTS-c, SS-31 acts at the structural level of mitochondrial membranes rather than through gene-expression pathways.

Research applications documented:

  • Mitochondrial dysfunction in cardiac research models
  • Reactive oxygen species reduction studies
  • Heart failure research (clinical trials have been conducted internationally)
  • Neurodegeneration research models
  • Muscle function in aging research

Proposed mechanism: SS-31 binds cardiolipin in the inner mitochondrial membrane, stabilizing membrane architecture and improving electron transport chain efficiency. The mechanism is well-characterized at the structural level and supported by extensive cardiac research literature.

Research administration: Subcutaneous injection in research models. Has been studied in clinical trials internationally though not FDA-approved.

Regulatory status: Not FDA-approved. Available as a research chemical with research-use-only labeling.

GHK-Cu — Copper Peptide in Aging Research

GHK-Cu was introduced in the healing-peptides discussion but also occupies a prominent place in anti-aging research due to its declining endogenous levels with age and its documented effects on gene expression patterns associated with younger biological states.

Anti-aging research applications:

  • Gene expression studies showing modulation of hundreds of genes related to aging
  • Skin biology research (collagen, elastin, fibroblast function)
  • Hair follicle stem cell research
  • Cognitive aging research models
  • Antioxidant enzyme system effects

Published research has documented that GHK-Cu modulates expression of genes associated with cellular senescence, DNA repair, and oxidative stress response — a profile that has driven its inclusion in aging research alongside its more established applications in wound healing and skin biology.

Thymosin Alpha-1 — Immune Aging Research

Thymosin Alpha-1 enters anti-aging research through immunosenescence — the age-related decline in immune function. The thymus gland atrophies progressively across adulthood, and the resulting decline in T-cell function is one of the most robust biomarkers of biological aging.

Research interest in Thymosin Alpha-1 for aging includes:

  • Immune reconstitution research in aging models
  • Vaccine response in older research subjects
  • Chronic infection susceptibility studies
  • Thymic involution modulation

Combined with its established hepatitis and immune-recovery research (covered in our companion guide on healing peptides), Thymosin Alpha-1 is one of the more thoroughly studied peptides across both healing and anti-aging research applications.

How Anti-Aging Peptides Are Studied in Research

Anti-aging research uses several specialized methodologies beyond standard pre-clinical study design:

  • Senescence markers — measuring cellular markers of replicative aging (p16, β-galactosidase activity, telomere length)
  • Mitochondrial assays — oxygen consumption, ATP production, membrane potential measurements
  • Lifespan studies — long-running animal-model research measuring survival curves under different peptide protocols
  • Healthspan endpoints — functional measures of aging (grip strength, cognitive performance, mobility scores)
  • Gene expression profiling — RNA-seq and similar techniques to characterize cellular response to peptide exposure
  • Biological age clocks — DNA methylation-based age estimation in research subjects

The NCBI/PMC aging-peptide animal research database documents these methodologies across the compounds discussed in this guide.

Peptides for Anti-Aging

FAQ

What are the best peptides for anti-aging research?

The most-studied anti-aging research peptides include Epitalon (telomere/pineal research), CJC-1295 + Ipamorelin (growth hormone axis), MOTS-c (mitochondrial-derived), SS-31 (mitochondrial membrane), GHK-Cu (copper peptide), and Thymosin Alpha-1 (immune aging). Each addresses different aspects of aging biology — no single peptide covers all of them.

Are anti-aging peptides FDA-approved?

No. None of the peptides discussed in this guide are FDA-approved as anti-aging therapeutics for human use. They are sold legally in the US as research chemicals with research-use-only labeling for laboratory and research applications.

What is the difference between MOTS-c and SS-31?

Both target mitochondria but through different mechanisms. MOTS-c is mitochondrial-encoded and acts through AMPK and gene expression pathways. SS-31 is synthetic and acts at the inner mitochondrial membrane structurally, binding cardiolipin to stabilize the membrane. They address different aspects of mitochondrial function.

How long do anti-aging peptide research protocols typically run?

Research timelines vary widely. Mechanistic studies in cell culture run days to weeks. Animal aging-marker studies typically run 4–12 weeks. Lifespan studies can run years. Cycle-based protocols (e.g., 10–20 day on / 10–20 day off) are common in many published peptide research designs.

Can anti-aging peptides be combined in research?

Combination protocols appear in research literature, with CJC-1295 + Ipamorelin being the most documented example. Combining peptides that act through different mechanisms (mitochondrial + growth hormone + immune) is a recurring research design. Combination studies require careful protocol design to characterize each compound’s individual and additive contributions.


Anti-aging peptide research is one of the most active areas in modern longevity science — spanning telomere biology, mitochondrial function, growth hormone modulation, copper-dependent gene expression, and immunosenescence. The six peptides in this guide each address a different mechanism, and the published research literature continues to expand the picture of how these compounds influence cellular and organismal aging in research models.

For research-grade anti-aging peptides backed by per-lot Certificates of Analysis and full HPLC-MS purity documentation, browse the OPS Peptide Science catalog, visit the OPS Peptide Science homepage for the full product overview, or verify a specific lot using its COA code.

Author: Shane Straight, Principal Chemist, OPS Peptide Science
Reviewed: May 2026

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