DSIP + Epithalon Stack: slaap- en antiverouderingspeptiden
Gepubliceerd: 2025-10-31 17:58:00 | PEPTEX Research

Why sleep and longevity share the same axis
Gerontology researchers have spent the past two decades converging on a single conclusion: sleep quality and the rate of aging are not merely correlated — they are mechanistically intertwined. The pineal gland sits at the center of both processes. It synthesizes melatonin, which governs circadian rhythms, and it is simultaneously a target of age-related calcification that progressively suppresses its secretory function. The result is a vicious cycle: worse sleep accelerates gland deterioration, which further degrades sleep.
Two peptides — DSIP (delta-sleep-inducing peptide) and Epithalon — act on different nodes of this axis. DSIP normalizes sleep architecture and neuroendocrine balance. Epithalon reactivates telomerase and restores pineal gland function. Together, they form a stack that addresses both sides of the problem simultaneously.
This article examines the mechanisms behind each peptide, explains the rationale for combining them, and outlines practical protocols. The stack costs less than 3 euros per day and targets fundamental processes that determine both the quality of nightly recovery and the pace of biological aging.
DSIP: the architect of deep sleep
What is DSIP
DSIP (Delta Sleep-Inducing Peptide) is a nonapeptide first isolated from rabbit brain tissue in 1977 by the Schoenenberger group. Its molecular formula is Trp-Ala-Gly-Gly-Asp-Ala-Ser-Gly-Glu, with a mass of approximately 850 Da. Unlike benzodiazepine-class sleep medications, DSIP does not force sleep onset — it modulates the neurophysiological processes governing transitions between sleep stages.
Mechanisms of action
DSIP operates across multiple levels of neuroendocrine regulation:
- Delta wave modulation. DSIP increases the proportion of slow-wave (delta) sleep — the phase during which growth hormone secretion peaks, memory consolidation occurs, and tissue repair reaches maximum intensity. Polysomnographic data show that DSIP administration boosts delta-wave amplitude without suppressing REM sleep.
- Cortisol regulation. Chronically elevated cortisol is one of the primary destroyers of sleep architecture. DSIP constrains peak cortisol surges through modulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, reducing the nocturnal hyperactivation characteristic of stress-induced insomnia.
- GABAergic interaction. DSIP interacts with GABAergic neurons but does not bind directly to GABA receptors the way benzodiazepines do. This explains the absence of tolerance development and morning sedation — two critical shortcomings of conventional sleep medications.
- CNS antioxidant protection. DSIP exhibits direct antioxidant activity, reducing lipid peroxidation in neural tissue. This matters because oxidative stress in the brain simultaneously worsens sleep quality and accelerates neurodegeneration.
Practical profile
DSIP is administered at 100-300 mcg subcutaneously or intramuscularly, typically 30-60 minutes before bedtime. Effects develop gradually: the first two or three nights may feel unchanged, but by the end of the first week most users report deeper sleep and noticeably fresher mornings. A typical course runs 10-30 days.
The key distinction: DSIP does not knock you out. It allows your natural sleep neurophysiology to function more efficiently. For people whose sleep is disrupted by stress, shift work, or age-related changes, this is a fundamentally different approach from pharmacological sedation.
Epithalon: rebooting telomerase and the pineal gland
What is Epithalon
Epithalon (Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly) is a tetrapeptide developed at the Saint Petersburg Institute of Bioregulation and Gerontology under Professor Khavinson. It is a synthetic analog of epithalamin — a peptide extract of the pineal gland. Khavinson's group, whose work began during the Soviet era, demonstrated that peptide-based pineal regulation can slow key aging biomarkers.
Mechanisms of action
Epithalon targets aging through several well-documented mechanisms:
- Telomerase activation. Telomerase enzymes rebuild telomeres — the protective caps on chromosome ends that shorten with each cell division. Telomere shortening is one of the recognized Hallmarks of Aging. In vitro studies show that Epithalon induces expression of the catalytic telomerase subunit (hTERT) in somatic human cells that normally do not express this enzyme.
- Melatonin synthesis restoration. The pineal gland calcifies with age, and nocturnal melatonin secretion declines. Epithalon restores the functional activity of pinealocytes — the cells that produce melatonin. This is not exogenous melatonin from outside; it is restoration of endogenous circadian hormone production.
- Antioxidant cascade. By restoring melatonin secretion, Epithalon indirectly strengthens the body's antioxidant defenses, since melatonin is one of the most potent endogenous antioxidants.
- Neuroendocrine normalization. Epithalon normalizes the rhythmic secretion of gonadotropins and growth hormone, affecting metabolic aspects of aging including body composition and immune function.
Practical profile
The standard Epithalon protocol calls for 5-10 mg subcutaneously, once daily, for 10-20 days. Courses are repeated 2-3 times per year. Epithalon does not produce subjectively noticeable effects in the first days — its action unfolds at the cellular level. Trackable markers include improved sleep quality (a consequence of melatonin restoration), normalized circadian rhythm, and, with long-term use, slowed telomere attrition.
Stack logic: why DSIP + Epithalon work together
Combining DSIP and Epithalon is not simply adding two peptides. It is addressing two different scales of the same problem.
DSIP works in the present. It improves sleep architecture in the current 24-hour cycle — more delta-phase sleep, less fragmented cycles, normalized cortisol. You wake up restored.
Epithalon works on the future. It restores the pineal gland's ability to independently produce melatonin in the right amounts at the right times. In parallel, it protects telomeres, influencing cellular aging directly.
A positive feedback loop connects these two levels: deep delta sleep, supported by DSIP, is the period of peak growth hormone secretion and intensive cellular repair. Epithalon, by restoring the melatonin signal, supports proper entry into those deep sleep phases. Each peptide strengthens the conditions under which the other operates more effectively.
An additional practical consideration: both peptides have favorable tolerability profiles and do not compete for receptor targets. They can be used in the same course without increasing the detoxification burden.
The sleep-aging axis: what the science shows
The connection between sleep and aging has moved beyond hypothesis. Multiple lines of evidence demonstrate that sleep disruption accelerates biological aging, while aging, in turn, degrades sleep architecture.
Telomeres and sleep deprivation. A 2019 meta-analysis pooling data from over 25,000 participants found that reduced sleep duration is associated with shorter leukocyte telomere length. The direction of causality is bidirectional: short sleep increases oxidative stress, which attacks telomeric DNA, and shortened telomeres in stem cells compromise tissue homeostasis, including the neural networks controlling sleep.
Melatonin as a chrono-protector. Melatonin is not merely a sleep hormone. It regulates expression of DNA repair genes, suppresses NF-kB inflammatory cascades, and coordinates circadian rhythms of autophagy — the process of clearing damaged cellular components. The age-related loss of melatonin secretion amounts to losing the central coordinator of cellular maintenance.
The glymphatic system. The discovery of the glymphatic system in 2012 added another dimension. During deep sleep, intercellular spaces in the brain expand by approximately 60%, and cerebrospinal fluid flushes out beta-amyloid and tau protein — metabolic waste products associated with neurodegeneration. DSIP, by increasing the proportion of delta sleep, potentially enhances precisely this clearance phase.
Practical protocols
Basic DSIP + Epithalon stack protocol
The following scheme reflects the most widely used recommendations in the peptide community. Individual adjustments depend on age, sleep status, and goals.
| Parameter | DSIP | Epithalon |
|---|---|---|
| Dosage | 100-300 mcg/day | 5-10 mg/day |
| Administration | Subcutaneous | Subcutaneous |
| Timing | 30-60 min before bed | Morning or evening |
| Course length | 10-30 days | 10-20 days |
| Course frequency | As needed | 2-3 times per year |
Combination strategy
Both peptides can be started simultaneously. DSIP is administered in the evening, Epithalon at any convenient time of day. If the Epithalon course runs 10 days and DSIP runs 20 days, you receive the full stack for the first 10 days, then continued sleep support through DSIP for the remaining 10 while Epithalon's effects on pineal function continue to develop.
What to watch
- Storage. Both peptides in lyophilized form should be stored at 2-8 degrees C. After reconstitution with bacteriostatic water, use within 3-4 weeks and keep refrigerated.
- Trackin...
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