The Science of Age-less Living
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.
40 episodios
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