Peptide Therapy Foundations: Mitochondrial Health
Course Details
This course examines the peptides that act at the level of the mitochondria: the small molecules and mitochondrial-derived peptides that influence energy production, oxidative balance, and cellular signaling. It is built for clinicians who want to understand how these agents work where the cell makes its energy, and how that mechanism sets them apart from peptides acting on classical receptors.
The lessons cover three distinct agents. SS-31 concentrates in the inner mitochondrial membrane and supports the machinery of oxidative phosphorylation. Humanin and MOTS-c are mitochondrial-derived peptides, encoded within the mitochondrial genome, that act as signaling molecules with effects reaching well beyond the organelle itself. Each one illustrates a different way that mitochondrial biology can be addressed therapeutically.
Every lesson follows the same clinical lens: what the agent is, how it works, what the evidence shows, and what a practitioner weighs before applying it. Together they map the mitochondrial peptides as a group so you can reason about each one in the context of the others.
SSRP FACULTY
William Seeds, MD
William Seeds, MD
William Seeds, MD
Before establishing the SSRP Institute, Dr. Seeds served as a board-certified orthopedic surgeon and sports medicine specialist for nearly three decades, including Chief of Surgery, Orthopedic Residency Site Director, and Director of The Ohio Bone & Joint Institute for University Hospitals.
His significant contributions to sports medicine have been recognized at the NFL Hall of Fame. He has consulted for athletes across all major sports leagues, including the NFL, NHL, MLB, NBA, and even the performers on “Dancing with the Stars.”
Through his research at the SSRP Institute, Dr. Seeds continues to explore the cellular pathways and mechanisms that positively impact disease and dysfunction in the body as well as optimize physical performance.
MOTS-c
In-ProgressLesson Resources
Overview
MOTS-c is a 16 amino acid mitochondrial derived peptide encoded within the 12S ribosomal RNA region of the MTRNR1 gene. It is translated in the cytoplasm, highly conserved across species, and sits alongside humanin and the short humanin-like peptides in the mitochondrial derived peptide family. Its primary target is skeletal muscle, the site of most insulin-stimulated glucose disposal, which positions it as a signaling molecule worth understanding when evaluating metabolic and age-related decline.
This lesson covers mechanism, the current evidence base, and clinical context. MOTS-c is not FDA approved. It is a WADA-prohibited substance under the S2 peptide and hormone section, and since September 2023 it has been listed as an FDA category two bulk substance, which restricts compounding for human use. That classification is under reevaluation alongside roughly nineteen other peptides.
How it works
MOTS-c inhibits the folate cycle, driving accumulation of AICAR, which is a potent activator of AMPK. Downstream, AMPK activation supports glucose uptake, fatty acid oxidation, mitochondrial biogenesis, and modulation rather than outright suppression of mTOR. Folate cycle inhibition can raise homocysteine modestly, which the speaker frames as a feature of the mechanism rather than a concern.
Under metabolic stress, glucose restriction, or oxidative stress, MOTS-c translocates from the mitochondria to the nucleus through AMPK. There it interacts with NRF2 and binds antioxidant response elements, enhancing transcription of genes such as heme oxygenase-1 and NQO1. Nuclear accumulation peaks around three hours post-stress and returns to baseline within 24 hours. This represents an example of mitonuclear communication, where the mitochondria signal cellular energy status back to the nucleus.
Evidence and clinical context
Preclinical data is strong for insulin sensitization, anti-obesity and thermogenic effects, anti-inflammatory activity, and exercise enhancement. Endogenous MOTS-c rose eleven to twelve fold in skeletal muscle after exercise, and systemic treatment improved treadmill performance and late-life physical capacity in aged mice. Human evidence is limited to observational exercise studies and phase one safety data on the CB4211 analog. Effects appear concentrated in metabolically challenged states, with limited benefit in healthy controls, and animal studies show metabolic benefits in males but not premenopausal females.
Reported clinical use is subcutaneous, commonly 5 to 10 mg starting at 5 mg, three times weekly, in cycles of roughly six to twelve weeks with time off afterward. No post-cycle therapy is needed, since endogenous production resumes on its own.
Key clinical points
- MOTS-c works through folate cycle inhibition, AICAR accumulation, AMPK activation, and NRF2-driven antioxidant gene expression.
- It is not FDA approved, is WADA-prohibited, and is a category two bulk substance with restricted compounding as of September 2023.
- Benefits appear specific to metabolically challenged states, with limited effect in healthy controls and observed sex differences in animal models.
- Use caution alongside metformin, aspirin, and other AMPK activators given hypoglycemia risk; avoid in cancer, pregnancy, and lactation.
- Suggested monitoring includes fasting glucose and insulin, A1C, HOMA-IR, metabolic and lipid panels, CRP, and body composition by DEXA or InBody.
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Continue your learning journey
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In this bonus episode from the MM15 Virtual Summit, Dr. Seeds addresses an important question around the use of GLP-1s for metabolic balancing in patients who do not need to lose weight. He shares his perspective on what may be considered microdosing, along with the clinical thought process he uses when determining appropriate dosing in these more nuanced cases.
Additional questions from the MM15 Virtual Summit can be found in our accompanying article here: [insert article link]
Access the full MM15 Course here: Mastermind 15 on Aesthetics
The Limits of Alternative Peptide Delivery
Dr. Seeds reviews oral, sublingual, and transdermal peptide delivery, and explains why subcutaneous injection remains the gold standard for most peptides. (Question Link)
A Deeper Look at the RAAS System
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The Renin–Angiotensin–Aldosterone System (RAAS): Beyond Cardiovascular Regulation
Dr. Seeds unpacks how RAS receptor balance drives inflammation, fibrosis, mitochondrial dysfunction, and tissue remodeling, far beyond its classical role in blood pressure regulation. (Article Link)
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