Cross-sectional study comparing serum humanin and MOTS-c levels in 30 non-athlete controls versus 75 professional athletes (47 moderate endurance, 28 high endurance), finding that professional athletes—particularly high-endurance athletes—had significantly elevated MOTS-c levels compared to non-athletes, with levels positively correlating with training volume and endurance capacity. Provides direct human evidence linking chronic exercise adaptation to elevated MOTS-c. Establishes that chronic endurance training sustainably elevates circulating MOTS-c in professional athletes—distinguishing the adaptational MOTS-c elevation from acute exercise responses and providing human evidence that MOTS-c is a marker of long-term mitochondrial fitness, relevant for aging and performance research.
Alser, Maha; Ramanjaneya, Manjunath; Rizwana Anwardeen, Najeha; Donati, Francesco; Botrè, Francesco; Jerobin, Jayakumar; Bettahi, Ilham; Mohamed, Nura Adam; Abou-Samra, Abdul Badi; Elrayess, Mohamed A