Quick Comparison
| AEDG Peptide | Cortagen | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | 1-2 hours | 1-3 hours |
| Typical Dosage | Oral/sublingual: 10-20 mg once daily. Injectable: 1-10 mg subcutaneous once daily. Typical course: 10-20 days, repeated every 3-6 months. Same protocols as Epithalon. | Oral/sublingual: 10-20 mg once daily. Injectable: 1-10 mg subcutaneous once daily. Typical course: 10-20 days, repeated two or three times yearly. Available in capsule form in some markets. |
| Administration | Subcutaneous injection, oral, or sublingual | Oral, sublingual, or subcutaneous injection |
| Research Papers | 8 papers | 1 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
AEDG Peptide
AEDG peptide (Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly) is the minimal active sequence of Epithalon and represents the core tetrapeptide responsible for its reported biological effects. According to the Khavinson peptide bioregulator theory, this short sequence has tissue-specific gene-regulatory activity, particularly targeting pineal gland cells and somatic cells capable of telomerase expression.
The primary reported mechanism is activation of telomerase, the ribonucleoprotein enzyme that maintains telomere length. AEDG is proposed to interact with regulatory elements in the hTERT gene promoter (encoding the catalytic subunit of telomerase), enhancing its transcription in somatic cells where hTERT is normally silenced or minimally expressed. Reactivation of telomerase allows cells to add TTAGGG telomeric repeats to chromosome ends, counteracting the progressive telomere shortening that occurs with each cell division and ultimately triggers replicative senescence. Cell culture studies from the Khavinson laboratory have reported that AEDG treatment extends the replicative lifespan of human fibroblasts and increases telomerase activity in peripheral blood mononuclear cells.
The second major reported mechanism involves regulation of pineal gland function. The pineal gland produces melatonin — the circadian rhythm hormone and potent antioxidant — and its function declines markedly with age (pineal calcification and reduced melatonin output). AEDG is proposed to modulate gene expression in pinealocytes, restoring melatonin synthesis toward more youthful levels. This would have downstream effects on circadian rhythm regulation, sleep quality, antioxidant defense, and immune function — all of which are modulated by melatonin. Additional reported effects include upregulation of antioxidant enzyme expression (SOD, catalase) and modulation of cell cycle regulatory genes. As with other Khavinson peptide bioregulators, the research base is predominantly from Russian institutions, and the proposed direct DNA-binding mechanism awaits independent validation.
Cortagen
Cortagen (Ala-Glu-Asp-Pro) is a synthetic tetrapeptide belonging to the Khavinson family of peptide bioregulators — short peptides proposed to regulate gene expression in a tissue-specific manner. The bioregulator hypothesis, developed by Professor Vladimir Khavinson over decades of research at the St. Petersburg Institute of Bioregulation and Gerontology, proposes that short peptides (2-4 amino acids) can penetrate cell membranes and nuclear envelopes, interact directly with DNA in a sequence-specific manner, and modulate transcription of tissue-relevant genes.
Cortagen is specifically designed to target neurons of the cerebral cortex. According to the Khavinson model, the AEDP tetrapeptide sequence has complementarity to specific DNA sequences in gene promoter regions active in cortical neurons. Upon binding to these regulatory elements, Cortagen is proposed to modulate chromatin structure and transcription factor access, influencing the expression of genes involved in neuronal function, synaptic transmission, antioxidant defense, and protein synthesis. The tissue specificity — cortex rather than other brain regions or body tissues — is attributed to the unique chromatin accessibility and transcription factor environment in cortical neurons that determines which genes are available for regulation.
Preclinical studies from Russian research programs have reported that Cortagen treatment improves cognitive function, enhances learning and memory, and provides neuroprotection in models of cerebral ischemia and age-related cognitive decline. The proposed mechanism involves restoration of age-related declines in protein synthesis in cortical neurons, enhancement of antioxidant enzyme expression (SOD, catalase, GPx), and improved synaptic function through upregulation of synaptophysin and other synaptic proteins. It should be noted that the peptide bioregulator field remains controversial in Western pharmacology — while the Russian research program is extensive, the proposed direct DNA-binding mechanism has not been independently validated through the standard molecular biology methods expected in Western peer-reviewed literature.
Risks & Safety
AEDG Peptide
Common
injection site irritation, mild drowsiness.
Serious
telomerase activation may promote pre-cancerous cells, limited Western safety data.
Rare
allergic reactions.
Cortagen
Common
mild headache, temporary fatigue during initial use.
Serious
limited Western safety data, most evidence comes from Russian-language literature, no long-term data on repeated use.
Rare
allergic reactions.
Full Profiles
AEDG Peptide →
A tetrapeptide (Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly) identical to Epithalon's core active sequence — effectively the same compound. Studied for telomerase activation and pineal gland regulation, promoting melatonin production and potentially slowing cellular aging through telomere maintenance. Part of the Khavinson bioregulator peptide family developed in St. Petersburg.
Cortagen →
A short synthetic peptide (Ala-Glu-Asp-Pro) developed by the Khavinson Institute in Russia. Designed to support brain cortex function by modulating gene expression in brain cells. Part of the Khavinson peptide bioregulator family alongside Epithalon and Vilon. One of the few peptides specifically formulated for brain function optimization, available in both injectable and oral/sublingual forms.