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BGE-117: HIF prolyl hydroxylase (HIF-PH) inhibitor

A core longevity pathway that drives regeneration, healing, and resilience

The Hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) pathway is significantly associated with longevity and numerous functional outcomes in our proprietary longitudinal human cohorts.

BGE-117 is a hypoxia-inducible factor-prolyl hydroxylase (HIF-PH) inhibitor, which protects HIF from proteasomal degradation. It has the potential to treat multiple diseases of aging through the activation of HIF target genes, which are involved in numerous biological processes including: erythropoiesis, vascular remodeling and angiogenesis, glucose uptake and glycolysis, and tissue regeneration.

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BGE-117: amplifies HIF signaling, which

is linked to muscle regeneration, resilience,

and energetics

BGE-117: amplifies HIF signaling, which

is linked to muscle regeneration, resilience,

and energetics

BGE-117: amplifies

HIF signaling, which

is linked to muscle

regeneration,

resilience, and

energetics

HIF chart
photo

BioAge advisor spotlight

Higher activity of hypoxia inducible factor (HIF) is associated with greater physical and cognitive function, as well as longer lifespan. Activation of HIF by blocking prolyl hydroxylase (PH) improves recovery from muscle injury. The clinically tested PH inhibitor BGE-117 could boost functional capacity by enhancing muscle repair, muscle oxidative capacity, and vascular function.

William Evans, PhD

UC Berkeley & Duke University School of Medicine

Formerly VP & Head, Muscle Metabolism Discovery Unit, GSK

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