Knowde Enhanced TDS
Identification & Functionality
- Food Ingredients Functions
- Pharma & Nutraceuticals Functions
- Product Families
- Chemical Structure
Features & Benefits
- Labeling Claims
- Food Ingredients Features
- The Benefits
- The strongest and longest acting antioxidant known. Up to 30 x better than glutatione, with a half life of 30 days as opposed to glutathione’s10 minutes
- Eliminates DNA damaging acids and singlet oxygen up to 75 x better than any known oral antioxidant
- Promotes a healthy anti-inflammatory response
- May helps protect against the effects of extreme viruses
- Protects the mitochondria and boosts cellular energy
- Who It’s For
MitoPrime™ is for anyone looking to lead a long, healthy, robust life, as it helps protect body-global cells, tissues, organs.
- Our Advantage
- Patented synthesis process pioneered by our scientific team
- Free amino acid, not in a salt form so it’s more concentrated
- Thione form, more active and available at physiologic pH than the Thiol form
- L-isomer, biologically active
- HPLC tested for purity and optical rotation tested for active isomer
- Natural fermentation process
Applications & Uses
- Markets
- Applications
- Food & Nutrition Applications
- How To Use
1 – 3 Servings per day (5 – 10 mg Per serving)
Small dose means transdermal, sublingual, and ultra-small delivery is possible.
Stable in aqueous solution, mix with smoothies or shakes, perfect for capsules- Ways to use MitoPrime:
- Food
- Beverages
- Powder
- Capsules
Properties
Regulatory & Compliance
Technical Details & Test Data
- Test Data
MitoPrime may be the farthest-reaching, deepest-penetrating, longest lasting oral antioxidant known. In addition, MitoPrime functions as root-cause anti-inflammatory, a multi-pathway immune booster, and cell detoxifier. Most importantly, MitoPrime helps protect nDNA and mtDA, suggesting it acts as a genomic stabilizer, the #1 predictor of longevity. In fact, MitoPrime’s active, L-ergothioneine has been dubbed the “Longevity Vitamin” by today’s scientific community.
Studies in humans have found no toxicity or adverse effects to be associated with ET administration, even at high doses.
Ergothioneine is known as ET in research, and the active isomer is known as L-ET.
The L-ET transporter, ETT, is a powerful and highly specific transporter for the uptake of L-ET. Our ability to absorb, distribute, and retain L-ET depends solely on this transporter.
Not only does L-ET get into the nucleus of our cells to protect our DNA, it can get into our mitochondria which is the cellular powerhouse that generates ATP (cellular energy).