Educational Wellness Information Only
This platform provides peer-reviewed research summaries and educational content about peptides for wellness and optimization purposes. Nothing on this site is intended as medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. We do not claim any peptide can diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Always consult a licensed healthcare provider before beginning any wellness protocol.
Statements on this site have not been evaluated by the FDA. Compounded preparations are subject to applicable state and federal regulations. Availability and eligibility vary.
5-Amino-1MQ vs Tiragratide
An educational, source-based comparison of 5-Amino-1MQ and Tiragratide — how each peptide works, what it's researched for, and what to know before going deeper.
Not a peptide but commonly grouped in peptide research. A selective inhibitor of nicotinamide N-methyltransferase (NNMT), an enzyme overexpressed in obese adipose tissue. Inhibition increases SAM and NAD+ availability, increasing adipocyte energy expenditure in animal models.
- Diet-induced obesity (rodent)
- White adipose tissue energy expenditure
- Age-related muscle function
- • Investigational; no human clinical trials yet.
- • Not FDA-approved.
Investigational triple hormone receptor agonist for metabolic disease.
An investigational peptide agonist targeting GLP-1, GIP, and glucagon receptors. Similar mechanism to retatrutide, designed to maximize weight loss while preserving lean mass through multi-pathway metabolic modulation.
- Obesity and metabolic syndrome
- Type 2 diabetes glycemic control
- NAFLD and liver fat reduction
- • Investigational; not yet FDA-approved.
- • Requires physician oversight in clinical trials.
5-Amino-1MQ vs Tiragratide — Key differences
- Class: 5-Amino-1MQ is classified as Metabolic · Small Molecule, while Tiragratide is Metabolic · Incretin.
- Primary research focus: 5-Amino-1MQ — diet-induced obesity (rodent); Tiragratide — obesity and metabolic syndrome.
- Tag: Metabolic vs Metabolic.