Pinealon

Pinealon (Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly) is a synthetic tetrapeptide bioregulator derived from the pineal gland that exerts epigenetic regulatory effects on gene expression involved in cognitive aging, neuroprotection, and circadian rhythm control.

Pinealon is a short synthetic tetrapeptide (Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly) developed by the St. Petersburg Institute of Bioregulation and Gerontology as part of a class of peptide bioregulators known as cytomedines.

Overview

Pinealon belongs to the Khavinson peptide bioregulator family — short peptides (2–4 amino acids) that act as epigenetic regulators by binding to gene promoter regions and activating transcription of tissue-specific proteins. Unlike longer peptides that act via receptor signaling, Pinealon's primary proposed mechanism is direct chromatin interaction, modulating expression of genes involved in neuroprotection, antioxidant defense, and melatonin synthesis regulation.

It is closely related to Epithalon (Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly is the same sequence as Epithalon's first four residues in some formulations) but is specifically targeted toward pineal and neuronal tissue rather than the thyroid/general aging axis.

Mechanism of Action

Epigenetic / Nuclear Mechanism

Pinealon's principal proposed mechanism distinguishes it from most peptides: rather than binding membrane receptors, it is thought to penetrate the cell nucleus and interact with histone proteins and DNA regulatory regions. This model — developed by Prof. Vladimir Khavinson's group — suggests the peptide acts as a transcription modulator, upregulating expression of genes involved in:

  • Antioxidant enzyme production (SOD, catalase, glutathione peroxidase)
  • Neurotrophic factor synthesis (BDNF, NGF)
  • Melatonin pathway enzymes (AANAT, ASMT)
  • Anti-apoptotic signaling (Bcl-2 family)

Pineal Gland Targeting

The peptide shows preferential accumulation in pineal gland tissue and hippocampal neurons in animal studies. This tissue specificity is characteristic of the bioregulator class — short peptides derived from specific glands tend to demonstrate homing to their tissue of origin.

Antioxidant Effects

Multiple in vitro and animal studies report Pinealon reduces reactive oxygen species (ROS) in neuronal cultures, particularly under conditions of hypoxia or oxidative stress induced by hydrogen peroxide or glutamate excitotoxicity.

Research

Neuroprotection Under Hypoxic Stress

Research using rat cortical neuron cultures demonstrated that Pinealon significantly reduced cell death under hypoxic conditions, outperforming controls. The mechanism involved upregulation of HIF-1α-related survival genes and reduction in caspase-3 activation (apoptosis marker).

Khavinson VKh et al. (2011) — Peptide regulation of gene expression and protein synthesis in brain neurons. Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine

Cognitive Aging & Memory

In aged rat models (22–24 months), Pinealon administration improved spatial memory performance in Morris water maze tests compared to untreated controls. The improvements correlated with increased BDNF expression in the hippocampus and reduced oxidative damage markers (8-OHdG levels).

Tarnovskaya SI et al. (2016) — Mechanism of the biological activity of short peptides: Interaction with specific DNA sites as the basis of gene expression regulation. Cell Biochemistry and Biophysics

Retinal Protection

A notable finding from the Khavinson group: Pinealon demonstrated neuroprotective effects on retinal ganglion cells in models of oxidative stress and age-related degeneration, preserving photoreceptor function. This has generated interest in its application alongside Retinalamin for combined retinal protection.

Khavinson V et al. (2012) — Peptide regulation of aging. SearchGate/Advances in Gerontology

Gene Expression Modulation

Microarray studies in rat brain tissue showed Pinealon modulates expression of over 40 genes involved in neuronal metabolism, stress response, and synaptic plasticity. Key upregulated targets included:

  • SIRT1 (sirtuin longevity gene)
  • BDNF (neuroplasticity)
  • SOD2 (mitochondrial antioxidant)
  • BCL2 (anti-apoptotic)

Circadian & Sleep Regulation

Given its pineal gland targeting, research has examined Pinealon's effects on circadian rhythm markers. Animal data suggest it can partially restore age-related decline in melatonin synthesis by upregulating AANAT (arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase), the rate-limiting enzyme in melatonin production.

Safety Profile

Pinealon has been used in Russian clinical gerontology settings for over two decades with a reportedly favorable safety profile. No significant adverse effects have been documented in published literature. As a tetrapeptide, immunogenicity risk is very low. No carcinogenicity, teratogenicity, or organ toxicity data in human trials (only animal safety studies).

Contraindications: None established. Theoretical caution in patients with pineal tumors or significant melatonin-sensitive conditions.

Pharmacokinetic Profile

Half-life
Not established
Tmax
Side effects: Minimal injection site reactions

Quick Start

Typical Dose
Injectable: 5mg daily or 100-300mcg daily; Oral: 0.2mg twice daily
Frequency
Injectable: daily for 20 days; Oral: morning and afternoon on empty stomach
Route
Intranasal, sublingual, subcutaneous
Cycle Length
20 days per cycle
Storage
Refrigerate at 2-8°C, use within 30 days after reconstitution

Molecular Structure

2D Structure
Pinealon molecular structure
Molecular Properties
Formula
C₁₄H₂₂N₄O₉
Weight
418.4 Da
Length
3 amino acids
CAS
Not widely catalogued (research compound)
PubChem CID
10273502
Exact Mass
418.1812 Da
LogP
-6.1
TPSA
261 Ų
H-Bond Donors
8
H-Bond Acceptors
10
Rotatable Bonds
14
Complexity
649
Identifiers (SMILES, InChI)
InChI
InChI=1S/C15H26N6O8/c16-7(3-4-10(22)23)12(26)21-9(6-11(24)25)13(27)20-8(14(28)29)2-1-5-19-15(17)18/h7-9H,1-6,16H2,(H,20,27)(H,21,26)(H,22,23)(H,24,25)(H,28,29)(H4,17,18,19)/t7-,8-,9-/m0/s1
InChIKeyQPRZKNOOOBWXSU-CIUDSAMLSA-N

Research Indications

Neuroprotection

Strong Evidence
Traumatic Brain Injury

Clinical protocol of 5mg daily showed significant cognitive improvements in 72-patient study.

Good Evidence
Direct CNS Delivery

Subcutaneous administration allows systemic circulation to brain tissue for neuroprotective effects.

Good Evidence
Cellular Protection

Caspase-3 suppression, ROS reduction, and excitotoxicity protection.

Cognitive

Good Evidence
Memory Enhancement

Enhanced neurotransmitter function with 1.9x serotonin increase in cell cultures.

Good Evidence
NMDA Receptor Expression

100 ng/kg optimal dose improved spatial learning in hippocampus.

Anti-Aging

Moderate Evidence
Cellular Senescence Reduction

Irisin expression increases linked to telomere protection and mitochondrial enhancement.

Moderate Evidence
Biological Age Markers

32-patient study showed significant improvements in aging indicators over 20-30 days.

Research Protocols

subcutaneous Injection

Pineal gland bioregulator. Short intensive cycle, morning/early afternoon.

GoalDoseFrequency
Phase 11.0 mgOnce daily
Phase 21.5 mgOnce daily
Phase 32.0 mgOnce daily
Reconstitution Guide (20mg vial + 3mL BAC water)
  1. Wipe vial tops with alcohol swab
  2. Draw 3.0 mL bacteriostatic water into syringe
  3. Inject slowly down the inside wall of the peptide vial
  4. Gently swirl to dissolve — never shake
  5. Resulting concentration: 6.67 mg/mL
  6. For 1.0 mg dose: draw 15 units (0.15 mL)
  7. For 1.5 mg dose: draw 22.5 units (0.225 mL)
  8. For 2.0 mg dose: draw 30 units (0.30 mL)
  9. Store reconstituted vial refrigerated at 2-8°C

oral

Convenient, proven clinical efficacy. Ultra-short peptide structure survives gastric acid.

GoalDoseFrequency
Cognitive Enhancement0.2mg twice dailyMorning and afternoon
Sleep Support200mcgDaily

intranasal Injection

Theoretical nose-to-brain delivery, potential rapid CNS access. Limited data available.

Interactions

Peptide Interactions

RETINALAMINcompatible

This has generated interest in its application alongside Retinalamin for combined retinal protection.

What to Expect

What to Expect

Week 1-2

Improved mental clarity and focus

Week 2-3

Enhanced cognitive processing and memory

Week 3-4

Peak neuroprotective and anti-aging benefits

Safety Profile

Common Side Effects

  • Minimal injection site reactions
  • Mild gastrointestinal adjustment
  • Occasional headache
  • Fatigue

Contraindications

  • Pregnancy
  • Lactation

Discontinue If

  • Severe headaches or mood changes
  • Persistent injection site reactions
  • Signs of infection at injection site
  • Unusual neurological symptoms
  • Allergic reactions

Quality Indicators

What to look for

  • White crystalline powder; proper freeze-drying indicated
  • Clear reconstituted solution; no particles or cloudiness
  • Pharmaceutical packaging with batch numbers from reputable sources

Caution

  • Ensure distinction between research (lab only) and pharmaceutical (human use) grade

Red flags

  • Discolored powder (yellow or brown) indicates degradation from heat or moisture
  • Cloudy solution indicates contamination

Frequently Asked Questions

References (17)

Updated 2026-03-08Sources: jabronistore-wiki, peptide-wiki-mdx, pep-pedia, pubchem, peptide-wiki-mdx-v2

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