What Is Epithalon?
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Research Overview Epithalon (Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly) is a synthetic tetrapeptide geroprotector developed by Prof. Vladimir Khavinson at the St. Petersburg Institute of Bioregulation and Gerontology as the active component of Epithalamin (bovine pineal gland extract). Its discovery originated from 1970s Sov...
Research Overview
Epithalon (Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly) is a synthetic tetrapeptide geroprotector developed by Prof. Vladimir Khavinson at the St. Petersburg Institute of Bioregulation and Gerontology as the active component of Epithalamin (bovine pineal gland extract). Its discovery originated from 1970s Soviet military research to protect soldiers from radiation and accelerated aging.[4]
Epithalon's mechanism is fundamentally different from classical receptor-ligand pharmacology. Rather than binding a cell surface receptor, it enters the nucleus and interacts directly with DNA (targeting CAG repeats and ATTTC promoter sequences) and histone proteins (H1.3, H1.6) — functioning as an epigenetic switch that converts heterochromatin to euchromatin, making silenced genes accessible for transcription.[1][3]
Research spans 10+ indication categories across gerontology, oncology, ophthalmology, endocrinology, and neuroscience — with over 50 years of study (1970s–2025). The "Epithalon Paradox" — activating telomerase while simultaneously inhibiting cancer — challenges conventional oncological assumptions and remains a major focus of current research.[7]
Discovery and historical context: The Khavinson program's "peptide theory of aging" emerged from analysis of bovine pineal extracts that protected animals from radiation-induced premature aging. Sequence analysis identified Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly as the active fragment; synthesis confirmed that the tetrapeptide reproduced the geroprotective activity of the parent extract. Epithalon's signature pharmacology includes a bell-shaped dose-response curve with peak activity at ultra-low concentrations (10⁻¹⁷ to 10⁻¹⁵ M), consistent with the modern view that bioregulator peptides act as informational rather than mass-action signaling molecules. The N-terminal glutamic acid is prone to spontaneous cyclization to pyroglutamate, requiring careful storage and HPLC purity verification (≥98% standard).[2][4]
Research framework: Modern Epithalon investigation organizes around three principal mechanism-of-action lines: direct DNA/histone binding (Khavinson 2020 binding studies, with high-affinity engagement of CAG repeats, ATTTC promoter sequences, and histones H1.3/H1.6), telomere maintenance (Al-dulaimi 2025 dual-mechanism — telomerase upregulation in normal cells, ALT pathway in cancer cells), and circadian/melatonin axis restoration (Goncharova 2001 in old rhesus monkeys, Ivko 2021 in human pineal gene expression). Researchers studying related geroprotector and bioregulator peptides commonly cross-reference our DSIP, Selank, and Thymosin Alpha-1 pages for parallel pineal-gland and immune-rejuvenation pharmacology.
“Preclinical Research Summary Key Preclinical Studies StudyModelKey FindingsRef Anisimov/Popovich et al.”
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