Glutathione deficiency in aging and the metabolic benefits of GlyNAC supplementation for mitochondrial health and oxidative stress

Glutathione Deficiency in Aging: What the Science on GlyNAC Is Telling Us

A New Frontier in Metabolic Restoration

At Axios Health and Wellness, we talk frequently about hormones, metabolic health, and optimizing performance as we age. But behind many of the symptoms patients describe — fatigue, brain fog, slower recovery, and stubborn insulin resistance — there is often a quieter issue operating in the background:

Glutathione.

Glutathione is often referred to as the body’s “master antioxidant.” It protects cells from oxidative stress, supports detoxification pathways, regulates inflammation, and plays a central role in mitochondrial energy production.

In simple terms, it helps your cells function efficiently and protects them from damage.

As we age, however, something changes.

What Happens to Glutathione as We Age?

Emerging research from Baylor College of Medicine has demonstrated that aging is associated with a significant decline in glutathione levels.

In a 2021 pilot clinical trial, researchers compared healthy young adults to healthy older adults and found that the older group had:

  • Markedly lower glutathione levels

  • Higher oxidative stress

  • Increased inflammation

  • Greater insulin resistance

  • Reduced mitochondrial fat-burning capacity

These findings are important because they suggest that what we often label as “normal aging” may partly reflect a measurable biochemical deficiency.

Why Glutathione Declines

Even more revealing was the reason behind this decline.

Researchers found that glutathione levels were not simply decreasing because oxidative stress was using it up. Instead, aging appears to impair the body’s ability to produce glutathione.

Two key amino acids required for glutathione synthesis decline with age:

  • Glycine

  • Cysteine

These amino acids act as the building blocks for glutathione production.

Without adequate raw materials, production slows.

The Role of GlyNAC

To test whether restoring these precursors would improve glutathione production, researchers supplemented older adults with a combination of glycine and N-acetylcysteine (NAC) — known as GlyNAC — for 24 weeks.

The results were striking.

Participants experienced:

  • Significant increases in glutathione levels

  • Reduced oxidative stress

  • Improved inflammatory markers

  • Better insulin sensitivity

  • Normalized mitochondrial fat oxidation

Researchers also observed improvements in:

  • Muscle strength

  • Walking speed

  • Cognitive performance

Perhaps most telling, when supplementation stopped, many of these improvements gradually reversed. This suggests that glutathione deficiency in aging is not a one-time depletion — it may be an ongoing production issue.

The “Glucose-Steal” Theory

One particularly interesting theory from this research involves what scientists described as a potential “glucose-steal” phenomenon.

When mitochondria become less efficient at burning fat — a common feature of aging — tissues shift toward burning more glucose instead.

However, total glucose production does not increase.

This creates metabolic competition throughout the body, including with the brain.

When mitochondrial fat burning was restored with GlyNAC:

  • Whole-body glucose use declined

  • More glucose theoretically became available for the brain

  • Cognitive performance improved

This may help explain why many adults experience brain fog and fatigue despite relatively normal routine lab work.

Mitochondrial efficiency and cellular fuel utilization appear to matter far more than we once appreciated.

A Systems-Based Approach to Aging

At Axios Health and Wellness, we take a systems-based approach to aging.

Rather than viewing fatigue, insulin resistance, or cognitive slowing as isolated problems, we look at the upstream physiological processes that may be contributing.

These include:

  • Glutathione synthesis

  • Mitochondrial function

  • Metabolic flexibility

All of these systems play a foundational role in maintaining resilient physiology and healthy aging.

While larger long-term trials are still needed, the physiologic rationale behind GlyNAC supplementation is compelling.

The safety profiles of glycine and NAC are well established, and emerging data suggests that correcting precursor deficiencies may meaningfully support healthy aging.

Aging vs. Decline

Aging is inevitable.

Decline, however, may not be entirely fixed.

Sometimes restoring health is less about adding something exotic and more about rebuilding what the body quietly lost along the way.

If you suspect your glutathione levels may be low — especially if you are experiencing:

  • Persistent fatigue

  • Brain fog

  • Slow recovery

  • Stubborn metabolic issues

—it may be time to take a closer look.

Our team at Axios Health and Wellness takes a comprehensive, systems-based approach to identifying and correcting underlying metabolic imbalances.

📞 Call: 720-899-9400
🌐 Visit: https://www.axioshealthco.com

Let’s address the root cause — not just the symptoms.

Selected Peer-Reviewed References

Kumar P, Liu C, Suliburk JW, et al.
Supplementing Glycine and N-Acetylcysteine (GlyNAC) in Older Adults Improves Glutathione Deficiency, Oxidative Stress, Mitochondrial Dysfunction, Inflammation, and Insulin Resistance. Clinical and Translational Medicine. 2021.

Kumar P, Osahon O, Venkatesh S, et al.
GlyNAC Supplementation Reverses Multiple Hallmarks of Aging in Older Adults: A Randomized Controlled Trial. The Journals of Gerontology: Series A. 2022.

Sekhar RV, Patel SG, Guthikonda AP, et al.
Deficiency of Glutathione in Aging and Its Role in Oxidative Stress. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 2011.