*New readout suggests protein intake and resistance training nearly eliminate lean mass loss on GLP-1 drugs.*
As of SAT, JUL 4, 9:42 AM · New Brief Daily
— Founders of the field —
Professor · M.D. · Ph.D. · Doctor of Medical Sciences · 1946–2023
Vladimir Khatskelevich Khavinson was the Russian gerontologist who founded the modern field of peptide bioregulation. From a military-medicine laboratory in Leningrad in the 1970s, he and his collaborators worked out a thesis that has shaped peptide longevity research ever since: short, tissue-specific peptides — three to four amino acids long — can act as endogenous signals that modulate gene expression in the organs they were extracted from. His program produced more than two dozen named peptide preparations over the next five decades. The best known of them, Epitalon (Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly), is the molecule most peptide longevity research still references today.
Khavinson graduated from the S.M. Kirov Military Medical Academy in Leningrad — now St. Petersburg — in 1972, and remained there for the first two decades of his career, ultimately retiring with the military rank of Major General of Medical Service. In 1992 he founded the St. Petersburg Institute of Bioregulation and Gerontology and served as its director, and later its Honorary Director, for the rest of his life. He held the position of Vice-President for the European Region of the International Association of Gerontology and Geriatrics (IAGG) and was elected to membership in the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences.
With his collaborator Vyacheslav Morozov, Khavinson began isolating short peptides from animal organs and asking whether the same peptides — applied to the corresponding organ system in another animal — would restore aging-related dysfunction. The first preparations were tissue extracts: Epithalamin from bovine pineal gland, Thymalin from thymus, Cortexin from cerebral cortex, Retinalamin from retina, Prostatilen from prostate. From those, his laboratory then synthesized short defined-sequence analogs: Epitalon (Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly) modeled on Epithalamin, Vilon modeled on Thymalin, and others. The thesis — controversial in some quarters, well-replicated in others — was that these synthetic short peptides bind DNA and histones to influence transcription in tissue-specific ways.
Khavinson's group published a long series of papers across the 1990s, 2000s, and 2010s reporting effects of his peptides on telomerase activity, telomere length, melatonin secretion, immune function, and biomarkers of aging in animals and elderly humans. His 2003 paper with Bondarev and Butyugov in Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine is the foundational in vitro reference for Epitalon-induced telomerase activation. Animal lifespan extensions were reported in transgenic mice and in Drosophila. Russian clinical observations across roughly thirty years reported benefits in elderly patients with cardiovascular and metabolic disease. Western replication outside his institute was sparse for most of his career — a limitation he himself acknowledged. The first major independent replication of the core telomerase mechanism arrived in 2025 from a laboratory at Cardiff, two years after his death.
Khavinson was named Honored Scientist of the Russian Federation and Honored Inventor of the Russian Federation, the country's two principal state recognitions for sustained scientific contribution. He authored more than 700 scientific publications and held over 200 patents. He died in November 2023, shortly before his 77th birthday. His laboratory at the St. Petersburg Institute of Bioregulation and Gerontology continues the work he started.
On this page, every Featured Brief that touches Epitalon, Thymalin, Cortexin, Vilon, or any of the related bioregulator peptides is downstream of his work.
Last updated July 4, 2026 — I read this morning's peptide research and picked the items that mattered. Fresh brief tomorrow.
*New readout suggests protein intake and resistance training nearly eliminate lean mass loss on GLP-1 drugs.*
Research VialsWhat CAS registry numbers are, why they matter for peptide identification, and how to use them to verify compound identity across suppliers.
PubMed · BMJ open diabetes research & careViolante-Ortiz R et al., BMJ open diabetes research & care · 2026 Mar 30. PMID 41912265.
Lifespan.ioAn 8-hour feeding window boosted median lifespan in male mice by 12%. Researchers note the gain may partly reflect voluntary caloric restriction — not fasting alone. The sex-specific finding adds nuance to blanket fasting claims.
Lifespan.ioA network-based analysis matched existing approved drugs to the core hallmarks of aging. The method flags repurposing candidates without needing new molecules — a faster path than de novo drug development.
BluePrint (Bryan Johnson)Johnson details four lifestyle protocols that he credits with pushing his blood pressure below 90% of 18-year-olds. The piece pairs personal metrics with cited evidence — useful for separating the signal from the self-promotion.
Lifespan.ioA newly identified non-coding RNA — found only in primates — worsens cellular senescence (the accumulation of dysfunctional cells that drives aging). The finding is relevant to human aging in ways that rodent models miss.
Dr Nick ZyrowskiGi Repair Formula Formula : http://bit.ly/2GmHKLs If you're wondering how to reduce gut inflammation, this video breaks down the science-backed strategies that can help calm the digestive tract, improve gut function, and support long-term
Rena Malik MDIn this episode, Rena Malik, MD brings together leading experts Dr. Helen Burney, Dr. James Smith, and Chief Medical Advisor of Swim Club Dr. Michael Eisenberg to discuss male infertility, declining sperm counts, and how lifestyle factors i
Regan ArchibaldCurious about the results of using ACE-031 for bodybuilding? In this video, I break down the science behind ACE-031, exploring the human research on lean muscle growth, body composition, and strength, while also explaining why promising cli
Dr Jones DCBook your free discovery call *HERE:* https://drjonesdc.com/yt1d Most people hit a GLP-1 plateau and assume the answer is a higher dose, but I see that backfire all the time. When appetite drops too low, food intake crashes, muscle loss s
Dr Jones DCBook your free discovery call *HERE:* https://drjonesdc.com/yt1d If you’re doing everything right for sleep and still waking up wrecked, the issue may not be total hours—it may be deep sleep. I explain how DSIP, or delta sleep-inducing pe
Dave AspreyCarnivore Diet, Cholesterol, Gut Bacteria, Microbiome, and Fasting Insulin Results from a 90-Day Self-Experiment What if cutting out fiber entirely actually improved your gut bacteria? This episode breaks down a real 90-day carnivore sel
Regan ArchibaldCould BPC-157 help you recover faster after ACL surgery? In this video, let's examine the current research on BPC-157 and ACL reconstruction, while also discussing important safety considerations, FDA regulatory status, and why personalized
The Enhanced ManDiscover the amazing benefits of GHK-Cu serum for your skin, a powerful anti-aging skincare solution that utilizes copper peptides to promote glowing skin and overall skin health. In this video, we'll be sharing real-world skin results from
Dr Livingood🔥 Join thousands of people getting my weekly newsletter — packed with fat loss tips your doctor will never tell you! Click here to subscribe: https://content.livingooddaily.com/b37709 Most people who lose fat gain it all back — and it's u
Research VialsMOTS-c, SS-31, and the emerging class of mitochondria-targeted peptides. How they work, what they target, and why mitochondrial medicine is growing.
Dr Debra Durst🎯 What happens when women start losing sensation, arousal, or pleasure with age—and is there anything that can actually help? In this episode of The SexMD Podcast, Dr. Debra Durst sits down with sex educator, author, and podcaster Susan B
Dr Tyna MooreGet Strong with Me Inside my NEW Strength Vault: https://www.drtyna.com/offers/G33fSdvS/checkout EP. 269: Moving was one of the biggest decisions I've ever made, and honestly, one of the best. In this episode, I'm sitting down with my re
Dr Michael MoellerTadalafil is one of the most underrated medications in men's health, and most of its benefits have nothing to do with what guys think it's for. In this video, Dr. Michael Moeller breaks down how Tadalafil (Cialis) works as a PDE5 inhibito
Thomas DeLauerUse code THOMAS at http://puori.com/THOMAS to get 32% off your first Puori Grass-fed Whey Protein order when you start a subscription! This video does contain a paid partnership with a brand that helps to support this channel. It is becaus
Research VialsThe Wolverine Blend (BPC-157 paired with TB-500, the active fragment of Thymosin Beta 4) is one of the most-researched multi-peptide combinations. This reference piece maps the mechanistic overlap and the gaps still waiting for clinical confirmation.
Research VialsEpitalon (a telomerase-activating tetrapeptide) comes in three chemical forms with different stability and potency profiles. This guide breaks down what the structural differences mean for research design.
Lifespan.ioResearchers tracked aging trajectories in specific cell types and found they could predict disease onset for Alzheimer's and lung cancer. Cell-specific clocks outperform whole-blood measures for early-warning signal.
Research VialsResearch overview of Melanotan peptides — melanocortin receptor agonists studied for pigmentation pathways, photoprotection, and related endocrine signaling.
Lifespan.ioA new study connects accelerated biological aging to the rise in solid cancers among adults under 50. Each generation shows a wider gap — suggesting upstream biological drift, not just lifestyle exposure.
Fight Aging!Researchers confirmed that age spots (senile lentigo) contain a higher burden of senescent cells — the dysfunctional cells known to drive inflammation. The finding strengthens the case for senolytic and peptide-based skin repair strategies.
Lifespan.ioLifespan.io's monthly summary covers the Thalion Initiative non-profit launch, advances in genomic-level aging interventions, and key papers from June. A useful single-read for researchers tracking the longevity field.
Fight Aging!A machine-learning approach now maps organ-specific senescent cell burden from a single blood draw. This could become a practical readout for researchers tracking senolytic or peptide interventions over time.
Lifespan.ioNeuroAge Therapeutics is running a six-month contest measuring participants on a clinical-grade aging panel at baseline and at six months. It's a real-world pressure test for longevity protocols — and a data collection exercise worth watching.
Peter AttiaPeter Attia reviews metformin's mixed cancer trial record and argues the failures don't close the door — they demand more precise patient selection. Directly relevant to longevity-drug-plus-cancer thinking.
A daily brief on peptide research. I read new papers, clinical trials, and physician interviews each morning, and run the best find as the top story. The rest of the page fills with smaller items below.
We watch PubMed, the DOI registry, and a short list of physician-researcher YouTube channels. We pick stories that move the field — new trial results, mechanism work, safety data, and clear teaching.
Peer-reviewed papers, ClinicalTrials.gov, and a small group of clinicians who teach in public. Every link goes back to the source so you can read the original.
A new top brief lands every day. The rest of the page rotates as fresh stories arrive. The full back catalog lives in the archive.
Yes. No ads, no affiliates inside the brief, no sponsored slots. Peptide companies that want to talk can use the contact page; their pitches do not run as news.