Glutathione

Glutathione

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Endogenous tripeptide (Glu-Cys-Gly) and master intracellular antioxidant; widely used in functional medicine via IV, oral, and liposomal delivery alongside peptide therapy protocols.

Quick Facts

Property Value
Also Known As GSH, L-glutathione, gamma-glutamylcysteinylglycine, reduced glutathione
Category Anti-Aging / Functional Medicine
Sequence gamma-L-Glutamyl-L-cysteinyl-glycine (tripeptide with gamma-peptide bond)
Molecular Weight ~307.3 Da
Molecular Formula Cโ‚โ‚€Hโ‚โ‚‡Nโ‚ƒOโ‚†S
PubChem CID 124886
Administration IV, Oral, Liposomal, Nebulized, Topical, Suppository
Typical Dose Range Oral: 250-1000 mg/day; Liposomal: 500-1000 mg/day; IV: 600-2400 mg per session
Half-Life ~2-3 hours (plasma); intracellular GSH has longer functional persistence
Storage Room temperature (stable); protect from light; reduced (GSH) form preferred over oxidized (GSSG)
FDA Status Not FDA-approved as a drug; sold as a dietary supplement (GRAS). IV glutathione is an off-label compounded preparation
WADA Status Not prohibited

Mechanism of Action

Glutathione is the most abundant low-molecular-weight thiol in mammalian cells, present at intracellular concentrations of 1-10 mM. It is synthesized endogenously in a two-step process: (1) gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase (GCL) ligates glutamate and cysteine, then (2) glutathione synthetase adds glycine. Cysteine availability is the rate-limiting factor for synthesis.

Antioxidant defense: Glutathione's thiol group on its cysteine residue directly scavenges reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen species (RNS). In the process, reduced glutathione (GSH) is oxidized to glutathione disulfide (GSSG). Glutathione reductase regenerates GSH from GSSG using NADPH. The GSH/GSSG ratio (normally >100:1 in cytoplasm) is a key indicator of cellular redox status.

Detoxification: Glutathione S-transferases (GSTs) conjugate GSH to electrophilic toxins, drugs, and xenobiotics, rendering them water-soluble for excretion. This Phase II detoxification pathway handles heavy metals (mercury, lead, arsenic), acetaminophen metabolites (NAPQI), carcinogens, and endogenous waste products.

Vitamin regeneration: GSH regenerates oxidized vitamins C and E back to their active reduced forms, maintaining the antioxidant network. This makes glutathione a "master antioxidant" that supports other antioxidant systems.

Immune function: GSH is critical for lymphocyte proliferation, NK cell activity, and T-cell function. Intracellular GSH levels in immune cells directly affect their antimicrobial capacity. RCT data show oral GSH supplementation increases NK cell cytotoxicity by up to 200-400% (PMID-24791752, PMID-28853742).

Age-related decline: Intracellular GSH levels decline with aging (estimated 10-15% per decade after age 45), contributing to increased oxidative damage, reduced immune function, and accelerated cellular senescence. This decline provides the rationale for GSH supplementation in anti-aging protocols.

Key Research Areas

  1. Oral bioavailability โ€” RCT demonstrated oral GSH effectively increases body stores at 250-1000 mg/day (PMID-24791752)
  2. Liposomal delivery โ€” Faster onset of GSH elevation and immune enhancement vs standard oral (PMID-28853742)
  3. Diabetes and oxidative stress โ€” RCT showed improved HbA1c and reduced oxidative damage in elderly T2D (PMID-35624890)
  4. Immune enhancement โ€” NK cell cytotoxicity increases with GSH supplementation
  5. Skin lightening โ€” Evidence for melanin reduction (controversial; safety concerns with IV route)
  6. Neurodegenerative disease โ€” GSH depletion in Parkinson's substantia nigra; supplementation under investigation

Evidence Level Summary

Evidence Type Count Notes
Human RCTs Several Oral supplementation, T2D, skin lightening
Systematic reviews 1+ Skin lightening applications
Human observational Many GSH levels in disease states
Animal in vivo Extensive Detoxification, neuroprotection
In vitro Extensive Antioxidant mechanism, immune cell biology

Clinical Applications

Protocols Using This Peptide

Ageless Peps Products

  • AP-Glutathione-Vial โ€” Glutathione Vial, $65, retail (draft status)

Dosing Reference

Supplementation Dosing Ranges

Route Dose Range Frequency Duration Source
Oral (standard) 250-1000 mg Daily 3-6+ months PMID-24791752
Oral (liposomal) 500-1000 mg Daily 1+ months PMID-28853742
IV push 600-2400 mg 1-3x/week Variable (clinic-dependent) Off-label clinical practice
Nebulized 600 mg 1-2x/day Variable Off-label (respiratory)
Suppository 200-500 mg Daily Variable Alternative to oral/IV

Cycling

Not typically cycled โ€” used as ongoing daily supplementation. IV sessions may be periodic (weekly/biweekly) as part of clinical detoxification or wellness protocols.

Contraindications & Safety

  • Contraindications: Known allergy to glutathione (rare); caution with IV use in patients with asthma (theoretical sulfite sensitivity)
  • Common side effects: Oral: generally well-tolerated; occasional GI discomfort. IV: rare anaphylaxis, headache, flushing
  • Drug interactions: May reduce efficacy of chemotherapy drugs that depend on oxidative mechanisms (cisplatin, doxorubicin โ€” theoretical); may enhance acetaminophen detoxification
  • Pregnancy/nursing: Endogenous molecule; supplementation generally considered safe but limited formal study
  • Special populations: IV glutathione lacks standardized dosing protocols; quality of compounded IV preparations varies

Synergistic Combinations

  • NAD+ + Glutathione โ€” Both decline with age; complementary cellular maintenance (NAD+ for energy/sirtuins, GSH for redox/detox)
  • SS-31 + Glutathione โ€” Mitochondrial protection (SS-31 targets cardiolipin, GSH scavenges mitochondrial ROS)
  • Glutathione + N-acetylcysteine (NAC) โ€” NAC provides cysteine for endogenous GSH synthesis
  • Glutathione + Vitamin C โ€” GSH regenerates oxidized vitamin C; synergistic antioxidant network

Related Research

PMID Title Year Study Type
24791752 Oral Glutathione Supplementation RCT: Body Stores 2015 RCT
28853742 Liposomal Glutathione: GSH and Immune Markers 2018 Open-Label Pilot
35624890 GSH Supplementation in Elderly T2D: RCT 2022 RCT

References

  • PMID-24791752 โ€” Richie et al., Oral GSH RCT, Eur J Nutr 2015
  • PMID-28853742 โ€” Sinha et al., Liposomal GSH pilot, Eur J Clin Nutr 2018
  • PMID-35624890 โ€” Sekhar, GSH in T2D RCT, Antioxidants 2022

Related

Note: Glutathione is not a traditional peptide therapeutic but is widely used in functional medicine alongside peptide therapy protocols. It is the most abundant endogenous tripeptide and serves as the master intracellular antioxidant. This vault entry provides the scientific context for its use in integrative clinical practice.

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