Speaker 1...so the idea is that boosting glutathione, which is our master intracellular antioxidant, could be a key to longevity. It's true that glutathione levels decline with age.
Speaker 2And there's certainly a compelling thesis there. Studies show that enhanced glutathione levels in elderly individuals with excellent health suggest it might be a marker, or even a cause, of increased healthspan. That’s from Ageing Research Reviews, 2023.
Speaker 1Right. And in mice, supplementing with GlyNAC — that’s glycine and N-acetylcysteine — increased lifespan by 24% while also correcting impaired glutathione synthesis and oxidative stress. That was published in Nutrients in 2022.
Speaker 2But let's be clear, that's animal data. Human clinical trials are where we really need to see consistent results. N-acetylcysteine, or NAC, provides cysteine, which is often the rate-limiting amino acid for glutathione synthesis.
Speaker 1Exactly. We also know that glutathione needs NADPH to function, and Nrf2 activators, like those found in cruciferous vegetables, switch on the genes that build glutathione and other antioxidants.
Speaker 2So we have these mechanisms, and some promising natural sources like whey protein, which is cysteine-rich, shown to raise plasma glutathione in a 2016 Journal of Neurological Sciences study. Garlic, too, boosts glutathione-related enzyme activity, as per a 2021 European Journal of Nutrition paper.
Speaker 1But direct human evidence that boosting glutathione *alone* leads to increased human healthspan or lifespan is still largely unproven. Many of these compounds affect multiple pathways.
Speaker 2Exactly. The human evidence for direct longevity benefits from glutathione supplementation, especially in healthy individuals, is still developing. We're looking at associations and mechanistic studies, but not necessarily definitive, large-scale clinical trials showing a direct cause-and-effect on human lifespan.