The Science of Age-less Living

Age-Less Cognition: The Real Science of SEMAX | Age-Less Top 20 Peptides

31 min · 25 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Age-Less Cognition: The Real Science of SEMAX | Age-Less Top 20 Peptides

Descripción

SEMAX is one of the most discussed cognitive compounds in the longevity and nootropic world — and arguably one of the most poorly understood. In this episode, Dr. Ethan does what this series always does: follows the science wherever it leads, without the hype and without the dismissiveness. The story of SEMAX starts not in a supplement company's marketing department, but in a Soviet government research institute in the 1980s, where neuropeptide scientists were asking a genuinely interesting question: could fragments of ACTH — the pituitary hormone best known for driving cortisol production — exert direct effects on the brain entirely independent of the adrenal axis? The answer was yes. And SEMAX was the engineered result: a stable, intranasally bioavailable heptapeptide designed to deliver those neuropeptide effects to the central nervous system. The mechanistic story is one of the more coherent in this series. SEMAX upregulates BDNF — brain-derived neurotrophic factor — in hippocampal and prefrontal circuits, the very regions most implicated in age-related cognitive decline. It modulates serotonin availability. It attenuates neuroinflammatory cascades. Each of those mechanisms has a plausible link to cognitive ageing, and together they form a rational basis for the compound's proposed effects. The evidence picture is more complicated. SEMAX has genuine peer-reviewed data — animal studies, Russian clinical trials in stroke and cerebrovascular disease, a 40-year research history. It is a licensed pharmaceutical in Russia, not a grey-market research chemical. But the clinical data has real structural limitations, and for the application most listeners are actually interested in — sharper cognition in a healthy ageing adult — the human randomised controlled trial evidence does not yet exist. Dr. Ethan also addresses the elephant in the room: the unusually consistent subjective reports from people who use SEMAX, what they actually tell us, and — critically — what they don't. And he covers the regulatory picture across the UK, EU, and US, the quality control risks of sourcing outside a licensed pharmaceutical supply chain, and what a properly designed research agenda for SEMAX would actually look like. If you've been offered SEMAX at a clinic, or you're considering it, or you simply want to understand why the gap between online enthusiasm and clinical evidence is so wide — this is the episode to start with.

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Age-Less LL-37: The Antibiotic in Your Blood | The Age-Less Top 20 Peptides

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In this episode of The Science of Age-less Living, Dr. Ethan Hausman-Marquis unpacks Humanin — a molecule with one of the most remarkable origin stories in longevity science. Discovered in 2001 in the surviving neurons of an Alzheimer's-affected brain, Humanin turned out to be encoded not in our nuclear DNA but inside the mitochondrial genome, making it the founding member of an entirely new class of molecules: the mitochondrial-derived peptides. It reframed the mitochondrion as more than a power plant — as a sensor that, under stress, sends peptide messages to the rest of the body. Dr. Hausman-Marquis walks through what Humanin actually is, its two forms, and its well-characterized protective biology: blocking apoptosis by neutralizing pro-death Bcl-2 proteins, signaling through a trimeric cell-surface receptor to activate survival pathways, engaging the IGF-1 axis, and improving insulin sensitivity. Then comes the honest reckoning. Humanin declines substantially with age, tracks with better outcomes in observational data, and runs high in the children of centenarians — but the human evidence largely stops there. There are no completed efficacy trials, no approved product, and no established dose, and much of the most impressive preclinical work relied on a synthetic analog roughly a thousand times more potent than the natural peptide. The episode separates the compelling biology from the near-blank clinical page, covers the evidence-based ways to support Humanin naturally — exercise, caloric discipline, and mitochondrial health — and closes with a look ahead to MOTS-c, the second major mitochondrial-derived peptide. No hype, no discount codes — just the science, as it actually stands in 2026.

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30 de jun de 202622 min
episode Age-Less Cognition: The Real Science of Pinealon | Age-Less Top 20 Peptides artwork

Age-Less Cognition: The Real Science of Pinealon | Age-Less Top 20 Peptides

Pinealon is one of the least discussed compounds in mainstream longevity medicine — and that obscurity is itself worth examining. Derived from pineal gland tissue and developed within a serious, decades-long Russian bioregulatory peptide research programme, it sits at the intersection of two of the most compelling areas in ageing biology: the decline of the pineal gland as a master regulator of circadian timing, and the emerging science of epigenetic modulation as a mechanism for restoring youthful gene expression patterns in ageing neurons. In this episode, Dr. Ethan Hausman-Marquis traces Pinealon from its origins in the St. Petersburg school of biogerontology through to its proposed mechanisms — BDNF-adjacent neuroprotection, circadian clock gene modulation, and a genuinely novel hypothesis about direct peptide-DNA interaction — and examines what the preclinical evidence actually shows. The honest answer is that Pinealon's evidence base is the thinnest in this series so far — geographically concentrated, not independently replicated, and nowhere near randomised controlled trial territory for any indication. But the biological target is one of the most legitimate in longevity medicine, and the mechanistic hypothesis, if it survives independent scrutiny, would represent something genuinely new in the neuroprotection space. This episode draws a precise line between what is established, what is plausible, and what remains speculation — and explains why the right response to Pinealon in 2026 is neither clinical enthusiasm nor dismissal, but a structured research agenda that has not yet been built.

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episode Age-Less Cognition: The Real Science of SEMAX | Age-Less Top 20 Peptides artwork

Age-Less Cognition: The Real Science of SEMAX | Age-Less Top 20 Peptides

SEMAX is one of the most discussed cognitive compounds in the longevity and nootropic world — and arguably one of the most poorly understood. In this episode, Dr. Ethan does what this series always does: follows the science wherever it leads, without the hype and without the dismissiveness. The story of SEMAX starts not in a supplement company's marketing department, but in a Soviet government research institute in the 1980s, where neuropeptide scientists were asking a genuinely interesting question: could fragments of ACTH — the pituitary hormone best known for driving cortisol production — exert direct effects on the brain entirely independent of the adrenal axis? The answer was yes. And SEMAX was the engineered result: a stable, intranasally bioavailable heptapeptide designed to deliver those neuropeptide effects to the central nervous system. The mechanistic story is one of the more coherent in this series. SEMAX upregulates BDNF — brain-derived neurotrophic factor — in hippocampal and prefrontal circuits, the very regions most implicated in age-related cognitive decline. It modulates serotonin availability. It attenuates neuroinflammatory cascades. Each of those mechanisms has a plausible link to cognitive ageing, and together they form a rational basis for the compound's proposed effects. The evidence picture is more complicated. SEMAX has genuine peer-reviewed data — animal studies, Russian clinical trials in stroke and cerebrovascular disease, a 40-year research history. It is a licensed pharmaceutical in Russia, not a grey-market research chemical. But the clinical data has real structural limitations, and for the application most listeners are actually interested in — sharper cognition in a healthy ageing adult — the human randomised controlled trial evidence does not yet exist. Dr. Ethan also addresses the elephant in the room: the unusually consistent subjective reports from people who use SEMAX, what they actually tell us, and — critically — what they don't. And he covers the regulatory picture across the UK, EU, and US, the quality control risks of sourcing outside a licensed pharmaceutical supply chain, and what a properly designed research agenda for SEMAX would actually look like. If you've been offered SEMAX at a clinic, or you're considering it, or you simply want to understand why the gap between online enthusiasm and clinical evidence is so wide — this is the episode to start with.

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