Clinical and mechanistic study of 85 CHB patients measuring circulating MOTS-c levels, demonstrating that HBV infection reduces MOTS-c and that exogenous MOTS-c inhibits HBV replication by promoting mitochondrial remodeling—improving mitochondrial morphology, membrane potential, and antiviral immune responses in infected hepatocytes. First evaluation of MOTS-c's antiviral role in HBV. Identifies mitochondrial remodeling as a key mechanism for MOTS-c's antiviral efficacy in hepatitis B—establishing that restoration of mitochondrial structural integrity impairs HBV's exploitation of dysfunctional mitochondria and suggesting MOTS-c supplementation as a novel adjunct to existing HBV antiviral therapy.
Lin, Caorui; Luo, Linjie; Xun, Zhen; Zhu, Chenggong; Huang, Ying; Ye, Yuchen; Zhang, Jiawei; Chen, Tianbin; Wu, Songhang; Zhan, Fuguo; Yang, Bin; Liu, Can; Ran, Ning; Ou, Qishui