Preliminary study in physically active healthy volunteers measuring serum MOTS-c concentration alongside lower-body muscle strength (countermovement jump) and maximal oxygen uptake (VO2 max). Found that MOTS-c positively correlated with lower-body muscle strength but was not related to VO2 max. Provides human evidence that circulating MOTS-c is a marker of muscular strength rather than cardiorespiratory fitness—suggesting MOTS-c's primary physiological role in humans relates to skeletal muscle contractile function rather than aerobic capacity, with implications for MOTS-c as a muscle strength biomarker in aging and sarcopenia research.
Domin, Remigiusz; Pytka, Michał; Żołyński, Mikołaj; Niziński, Jan; Rucinski, Marcin; Guzik, Przemysław; Zieliński, Jacek; Ruchała, Marek