Quick Comparison

GLP-1Klotho
Half-Life1-2 minutesRecombinant alpha-Klotho: approximately 10-15 hours (estimated from primate studies)
Typical DosageNot used therapeutically due to extremely short half-life. Research: continuous intravenous infusion at variable rates. All approved GLP-1 therapies use modified analogues with extended half-lives instead.Currently no established human therapeutic dose. Phase 1 clinical trials of recombinant alpha-Klotho are exploring intravenous and subcutaneous dose-escalation protocols. Animal studies have used 10-50 mcg/kg subcutaneous several times per week.
AdministrationSubcutaneous injection or intravenous infusionRecombinant alpha-Klotho: subcutaneous or intravenous injection (clinical trial settings only)
Research Papers32 papers5 papers
Categories

Mechanism of Action

GLP-1

GLP-1 (glucagon-like peptide 1) is the native incretin hormone produced by enteroendocrine L-cells in the distal small intestine and colon in response to nutrient ingestion. It is the endogenous molecule that all GLP-1 receptor agonist drugs (semaglutide, liraglutide, etc.) are designed to mimic. Understanding native GLP-1 is essential to understanding the entire drug class built upon its biology.

Upon release, GLP-1 binds to GLP-1 receptors (GLP-1R) — G protein-coupled receptors expressed on pancreatic beta cells, the GI tract, the heart, the kidneys, and critically, the brain. In the pancreas, GLP-1R activation stimulates adenylyl cyclase, raising intracellular cAMP levels, which potentiates glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. This glucose-dependence is a key safety feature — GLP-1 only promotes insulin release when blood sugar is elevated, minimizing hypoglycemia risk. Simultaneously, GLP-1 suppresses glucagon secretion from alpha cells, further reducing hepatic glucose output.

In the brain, GLP-1 receptors in the hypothalamus (arcuate nucleus, paraventricular nucleus) and brainstem (area postrema, nucleus tractus solitarius) mediate appetite suppression and satiety. GLP-1 also activates vagal afferents to slow gastric emptying, prolonging nutrient absorption and post-meal satiety. The critical limitation of native GLP-1 is its extremely rapid degradation by the enzyme dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4), which cleaves the first two amino acids within 1-2 minutes, rendering it inactive. This ultra-short half-life is why pharmaceutical GLP-1 analogues require structural modifications (albumin binding, DPP-4 resistance) to achieve clinically useful durations of action.

Klotho

Klotho is a single-pass transmembrane protein primarily expressed in the kidney, parathyroid gland, and choroid plexus, with a soluble form (s-Klotho) cleaved from the membrane and circulating systemically as an endocrine factor. It exists in three forms — alpha-Klotho (the most studied, anti-ageing form), beta-Klotho (which partners with FGF21), and gamma-Klotho — each with distinct receptor partnerships and tissue effects.

At the receptor level, alpha-Klotho is the obligate co-receptor for fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF23), enabling FGF23 to bind and activate FGFR1 receptors in the kidney to regulate phosphate excretion. This makes Klotho a central node in mineral metabolism. Beyond this canonical role, soluble Klotho exerts numerous endocrine effects: it inhibits the IGF-1/insulin signalling pathway (a conserved longevity mechanism shared with caloric restriction), enhances expression of antioxidant enzymes via FoxO transcription factor activation, suppresses Wnt signalling (reducing stem cell exhaustion), inhibits TGF-beta signalling (preventing fibrosis), and blocks NF-kB and NLRP3 inflammasome activation (reducing inflammaging).

The ageing phenotype connection is striking: mice lacking Klotho develop multi-organ ageing — atherosclerosis, osteoporosis, skin atrophy, cognitive decline — within weeks of birth, while mice with elevated Klotho expression live up to 30% longer than controls. In humans, circulating Klotho levels decline with age, and lower levels associate with increased mortality and chronic disease risk in observational studies. Recombinant alpha-Klotho is in early clinical development as a potential therapy for chronic kidney disease, cognitive decline, and broader age-related diseases. The 2026 research wave around Klotho has positioned it as one of the most promising single-protein interventions in the longevity field, though no therapeutic Klotho product is yet approved for human use.

Risks & Safety

GLP-1

Common

nausea and vomiting at higher doses.

Serious

dangerously low blood sugar if combined with insulin or diabetes medications.

Rare

allergic reactions.

Klotho

Common

limited human safety data. Animal studies show generally good tolerability.

Serious

theoretical risk of altering phosphate and calcium homeostasis (Klotho is a critical regulator of FGF23 signalling); unknown effects on cancer biology in long-term use.

Rare

allergic reactions to recombinant protein. Quality and authenticity of any product sold as Klotho outside formal clinical trials should be considered highly uncertain.

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