Epithalon — Canada Research Brief
Epithalon is a synthetic tetrapeptide developed in Russia as a short analogue of the pineal peptide epithalamin, studied preclinically for telomerase activity, circadian rhythm, and age-related endpoints.
Key facts
| Canonical name | Epithalon |
|---|---|
| Alternate names | Epitalon, Epithalamin tetrapeptide |
| Drug class | Synthetic tetrapeptide (longevity research) |
| CAS number | 307297-39-8 |
| Molecular formula | C14H22N4O9 |
| Molecular weight | 390.35 g/mol |
| Sequence | Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly |
Origin and rationale
Epithalon was developed in the 1990s by Vladimir Khavinson and colleagues at the St. Petersburg Institute of Bioregulation and Gerontology. It is the short synthetic analogue of epithalamin, a peptide preparation originally isolated from bovine pineal gland extract and used in Soviet/ Russian clinical practice as a putative anti-ageing agent. Khavinson selected the minimal active sequence (Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly) from proteomic analyses of the pineal extract.
Preclinical profile
The Khavinson group has published extensively on epithalon over four decades. Key reported findings include:
- Effects on telomerase activity and telomere length in human somatic cell cultures (fibroblasts, lymphocytes).
- Lifespan extension in rodent models when dosed over long courses.
- Circadian/melatonin effects consistent with a pineal-axis-modulating mechanism — plausible given the peptide's epithalamin ancestry.
- Immunomodulation and hormonal normalisation in ageing animals.
The important methodological caveat is that the bulk of the literature comes from a single research group. Independent replication at scale is limited, which is a standard concern for interpreting claimed mechanisms.
Storage
Store lyophilised epithalon at −20°C. Reconstituted peptide is stable refrigerated at 2–8°C for 2–4 weeks.
Frequently asked questions
What is epithalon?
Is epithalon approved as a longevity drug?
Does epithalon affect telomerase?
What is epithalon's molecular weight?
References
- [1]Khavinson VK. Peptides and Ageing. Neuroendocrinology Letters, 2002. PMID: 12374158
- [2]Wikipedia contributors. Epitalon — Wikipedia, 2024
- [3]National Center for Biotechnology Information. PubChem CID 219042 — Epithalon, 2024