Written by PX1 Research Team
PX1 chemists and research educators with hands-on experience in US-based peptide manufacturing, HPLC / mass-spectrometry lot testing, and endotoxin QC. All content is citation-backed and peer-reviewed for accuracy.
The Essential Epithalon Peptide Guide for Proven Anti-Aging Research 2026
Research GuideReviewed By
PX1 QC — Analytical Chemistry Team
Every article is reviewed by PX1's in-house analytical team for accuracy on mechanism, dosing ranges reported in the literature, and lab-handling guidance. We do not publish clinical or medical advice.
What Epithalon is
Epithalon belongs to the mitochondrial-longevity family — compounds that target either NAD⁺ metabolism, mitochondrial-derived peptide (MDP) signaling, or inner-mitochondrial-membrane function directly. The class shares a common rationale: cellular aging biology is inseparable from mitochondrial function, and interventions that restore mitochondrial output have downstream effects across nearly every age-associated pathway.
Epithalon (Epitalon) is a synthetic tetrapeptide (Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly) developed at the St. Petersburg Institute of Bioregulation and Gerontology. Published research reports telomerase activation and lifespan-extension effects in rodent models.
Mechanism of action
- NAD⁺ — direct substrate for sirtuins (SIRT1-7), PARPs, and CD38. Increasing cellular NAD⁺ pools boosts sirtuin-mediated deacetylation of longevity-relevant transcription factors and enhances DNA-damage repair capacity.
- MOTS-c — activates AMPK, upregulates GLUT4 translocation, improves insulin-stimulated glucose uptake, and increases oxidative phosphorylation efficiency in preclinical muscle and adipose models.
- SS-31 — cardiolipin binding preserves ETC complex I/III/IV supercomplex assembly and reduces electron leakage that produces mitochondrial ROS.
- Epithalon — proposed telomerase-activator; published Russian data report Peptide-induced increase in telomere length in senescent cell culture.
Published research findings
- NAD⁺ has a large clinical literature spanning metabolic disease, neurodegeneration, and post-COVID fatigue (Rejuvenate trial, Metrodora, etc.).
- MOTS-c has published preclinical data showing prevention of diet-induced obesity, improved insulin sensitivity, and enhanced exercise capacity (Reynolds et al., Nature Communications).
- SS-31 has been in multiple Phase 2/3 human trials for primary mitochondrial myopathy (Bendavia program, later reformulated as elamipretide).
- Epithalon has 30+ years of published Russian gerontology data (Prof. Anisimov group).
Routes reported in research
- Subcutaneous injection for MOTS-c, SS-31, and Epithalon.
- Intravenous or subcutaneous for NAD⁺; nasal-spray formulations exist in research use.
Dosing ranges reported in the literature
- NAD⁺: subcutaneous 100–500 mg per session, 3–5 sessions per week; IV protocols 250–1000 mg per session.
- MOTS-c: 5–10 mg subcutaneous, 2–3 times per week in reported research protocols.
- SS-31: 20–40 mg subcutaneous daily in the Bendavia clinical program.
- Epithalon: 5–10 mg subcutaneous daily, typically for 10–20 day cycles.
Stacking discussed in the literature
- NAD⁺ + MOTS-c — the canonical mitochondrial-support pairing.
- SS-31 + NAD⁺ + Urolithin A — a broader mitochondrial-quality protocol.
- Epithalon + GHK-Cu — combined longevity-signaling stack.
Standard laboratory handling
Every research vial from PX1 is a lyophilized (freeze-dried) powder sealed under vacuum in a Type-I borosilicate vial with a butyl-rubber stopper and aluminum crimp seal. Correct handling preserves potency and prevents peptide-bond hydrolysis that degrades the active molecule.
- Storage before reconstitution: 2–8 °C refrigerator is ideal; freezer (−20 °C) for storage beyond six months. Short excursions to room temperature during shipping do not compromise integrity — the compound is stable in its solid state.
- Reconstitution solvent: bacteriostatic water for injection (0.9% benzyl alcohol) is standard for research protocols that require multiple sampling events from the same vial. Sterile water is acceptable for single-use protocols.
- Reconstitution technique: inject the diluent slowly against the vial wall — never directly onto the lyophilized cake. Swirl gently; do not shake. Shaking introduces air, denatures peptide secondary structure, and can create insoluble aggregates.
- Post-reconstitution storage: 2–8 °C refrigerated, typically stable 21–30 days depending on the peptide. Freezing a reconstituted solution repeatedly is not recommended — freeze/thaw cycles are the single biggest driver of loss-of-potency in the research literature.
- Concentration math: volume of diluent (mL) = peptide mass (mg) ÷ desired concentration (mg/mL). Example: 10 mg vial + 2 mL bacteriostatic water = 5 mg/mL.
Purity, identity and COA verification
The single most important due-diligence step when sourcing Epithalon for research is reviewing the lot-specific Certificate of Analysis (COA). A credible COA contains:
- HPLC purity value with chromatogram — target ≥ 98% for injectable-grade research peptides; ≥ 99% for the newest generation of GLP/incretin compounds. A single well-defined main peak with baseline separation from impurities is what you are looking for.
- Identity confirmation by mass spectrometry — LC-MS or MALDI-TOF confirming the observed molecular weight matches the theoretical mass to within instrument tolerance.
- Endotoxin (LAL / kinetic-chromogenic) result — expressed in EU/mg; USP guidance for parenteral products is well below 5 EU/kg body-weight equivalent, and reputable suppliers report < 10 EU/mg on the COA.
- Sterility result — USP <71> membrane filtration or direct inoculation, both bacterial and fungal.
- Karl Fischer moisture — target < 5% residual water for a properly lyophilized cake.
- Residual-solvent screen — DMF, TFA, DCM, acetonitrile below ICH Q3C thresholds.
PX1 publishes lot-specific COAs at /purity-reports. If you have received a shipment and want to verify the exact lot documentation for Epithalon, cross-reference the lot number on the vial label to the COA PDF.
Why researchers choose PX1 for Epithalon
- 100% U.S. synthesis, lyophilization, and fill/finish. No repackaged imports. Every step from raw amino acid to sealed vial happens under one U.S. GMP-compliant roof.
- Third-party ISO-17025 testing on every lot. Purity, identity, endotoxin, sterility, moisture, and residual-solvent testing performed by an independent analytical laboratory whose data appears on the shipped COA.
- Chain-of-custody documentation from raw material through final QC — the same documentation package a clinical CDMO would provide.
- Same-day shipping on in-stock catalog items ordered before 3 p.m. ET, with insulated packaging and cold-pack where appropriate.
Common researcher questions
Q: How do I know the vial contents match the label? Compare the lot number on the vial to the lot number on the COA. The COA lists HPLC purity, identity by mass-spec, and endotoxin. If any of the three is missing or the lot doesn't match, don't proceed.
Q: Can I use bacteriostatic water past its printed expiration? Bacteriostatic water carries a manufacturer-assigned expiration for the sealed vial. Once punctured, USP guidance limits multi-dose vials to 28 days at 2–8 °C. Beyond 28 days, discard.
Q: Is refrigeration required during shipping? For most lyophilized peptides, no — the solid form is stable at ambient temperature for weeks. Some compounds (IGF-1 LR3, certain GH-releasing peptides) benefit from cold-chain shipping. PX1 uses insulated packaging for temperature-sensitive lines.
Q: What if the reconstituted solution is cloudy? Cloudiness indicates aggregation or precipitation and the solution should not be used. Common causes: over-vigorous shaking, incompatible diluent, or a vial that has passed its stability window.
Research use disclaimer
Epithalon is supplied to licensed research professionals for in vitro and in vivo laboratory research only. Products are not intended for human consumption, veterinary use, diagnostic use, therapeutic use, or as a food additive or cosmetic. Nothing on this page constitutes medical advice. Consult the primary literature — clinical-trial registrations, peer-reviewed publications — before designing any protocol. Compounds discussed here are investigational; several have not received FDA approval for any indication.
Additional PX1 references
- Complete research library
- Lot-specific purity reports
- Product catalog
- Manufacturing & QC standards

