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01 — Identity
Name & Classification
SS-31 stands for Szeto-Schiller Peptide 31, named after its inventors Hazel Szeto and Peter Schiller. Its chemical name is D-Arg-2′6′-Dmt-Lys-Phe-NH₂, also known commercially as Elamipretide (MTP-131).
It is a synthetic tetrapeptide (4 amino acids) that selectively concentrates in the inner mitochondrial membrane where it binds cardiolipin — a phospholipid critical for electron transport chain function. It is classified as a mitochondria-targeted antioxidant and cardioprotective peptide.
02 — Origin
When It Was Developed
Early 2000s
Developed by Dr. Hazel Szeto at Weill Cornell Medical College. Originally designed as an opioid receptor agonist; the mitochondrial targeting was discovered serendipitously.
2004–2006
Landmark papers published showing SS-31 selectively concentrates in the inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM) and protects cardiolipin from oxidation — a completely novel mechanism.
2010s
Licensed to Stealth BioTherapeutics as Elamipretide (MTP-131). Phase 2/3 trials launched for heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), Barth syndrome, and primary mitochondrial myopathy.
2019–2022
Phase 3 MMPOWER-3 trial for Barth syndrome — a rare mitochondrial disease — showed functional improvement but missed primary endpoint. Research continued in cardiac, renal, and aging contexts.
2022–Present
Growing use in longevity and sports medicine. Animal studies show dramatic reversal of age-related mitochondrial dysfunction. No FDA approval; research peptide status in wellness space.
03 — Research History
Research Background
SS-31's defining mechanism is its ability to bind cardiolipin — a phospholipid unique to the inner mitochondrial membrane that is essential for organizing the electron transport chain (ETC) supercomplexes. With age and disease, cardiolipin becomes oxidized and fragmented, causing ETC inefficiency, increased ROS production, and mitochondrial collapse. SS-31 intercepts this process directly at the source.
A landmark 2021 study in Nature Aging showed that SS-31 in aged mice reversed multiple hallmarks of cardiac aging in weeks — not months — restoring mitochondrial cristae architecture, reducing oxidative stress, and improving cardiac output. This is one of the most dramatic aging reversal results seen with any single compound in animal models.
SS-31 also improves ATP production efficiency, reduces mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) without scavenging them, and preserves cytochrome c in the ETC rather than allowing its release as an apoptosis trigger.
04 — Key Benefits
Proposed Benefits
Binds and protects cardiolipin in the inner mitochondrial membrane
Restores ETC supercomplex organization and ATP synthesis efficiency
Reduces mitochondrial ROS without interfering with signaling ROS
Dramatic cardiac protection — reduces ischemia-reperfusion injury
Reverses age-related mitochondrial dysfunction in animal models
Improves exercise tolerance and physical capacity in aging
Renal protection — reduces acute kidney injury and fibrosis
Neuroprotective — improves neuronal mitochondrial function
05 — Reconstitution
10 mg Vial + 300 Units BAC Water
33.3 mcg
per unit drawn on insulin syringe
4–6 wk
shelf life (fridge)
🧊
RECONSTITUTED SHELF LIFE
21 days after mixing
Hydrophobic mitochondrial peptide. Aggregation risk with time.
Storage: 2–8°C (fridge) · Protected from light · Do NOT freeze
Preload syringes/cartridges to minimize vial disturbance
300 units = 0.3 mL on a U-100 insulin syringe. Store refrigerated at 36–46°F / 2–8°C after reconstitution. SS-31 is stable in solution but sensitive to repeated freeze-thaw cycles — do not freeze once reconstituted. Light-sensitive; store in original vial or amber container.
06 — Dosage
Dosage Reference
Dosage Reference (10mg vial + 3.0mL BAC = 33.3 mcg/unit)
| Level | Dose | Units to Draw | Context |
| LOW | 300 mcg | 9 units | Conservative start — sensitive individuals or first cycle |
| STANDARD | 500 mcg | 15 units | Most common research dose — active mitochondrial support |
| HIGH | 1 mg (1000 mcg) | 30 units | Aggressive protocol — monitor closely |
Reconstitute 10mg vial with 3.0mL BAC water = 33.3 mcg/unit. Inject subcutaneously daily. SS-31 has an extremely short plasma half-life (~30 min) but mitochondrial retention is prolonged. Injection site reactions (redness, mild pain) are the most commonly reported side effect.
07 — Monitoring
Biomarkers, Lab Tests & Ranges
SS-31 primarily acts on cardiac, mitochondrial, and renal systems. Monitor the following before starting, at 6 weeks, and at cycle end.
▸ Mitochondrial Function
| Biomarker | Lab Test | Clinical Range | Optimal Range |
| Lactate (resting) | Serum Lactate | CLINICAL0.5–2.2 mmol/L | OPTIMAL0.5–1.0 mmol/L |
| CoQ10 (Ubiquinol) | Plasma CoQ10 | CLINICAL0.4–1.9 µg/mL | OPTIMAL1.5–3.5 µg/mL |
GDF-15 Mitochondrial stress signal | Serum GDF-15 | CLINICAL<1200 pg/mL | OPTIMAL<400 pg/mL |
8-OHdG Oxidative DNA damage | Urine 8-OHdG | CLINICAL<15 ng/mg creatinine | OPTIMAL<5 ng/mg creatinine |
▸ Cardiac Health
| Biomarker | Lab Test | Clinical Range | Optimal Range |
NT-proBNP Heart stress marker | Serum NT-proBNP | CLINICAL<125 pg/mL (<75 yrs) | OPTIMAL<50 pg/mL |
| Troponin I / T | High-sensitivity Troponin | CLINICAL<0.04 ng/mL (standard) | OPTIMALUndetectable / baseline stable |
| hsCRP | High-sensitivity CRP | CLINICAL<3.0 mg/L | OPTIMAL<0.5 mg/L |
▸ Renal & Metabolic Safety
| Biomarker | Lab Test | Clinical Range | Optimal Range |
| Creatinine / eGFR | CMP | CLINICALCreat 0.7–1.3 mg/dL / eGFR >60 | OPTIMALCreat 0.8–1.1 / eGFR >90 |
Cystatin C Sensitive kidney marker | Serum Cystatin C | CLINICAL0.5–1.0 mg/L | OPTIMAL<0.7 mg/L |
| AST / ALT | CMP | CLINICALAST 10–40 / ALT 7–56 U/L | OPTIMALAST <26 / ALT <26 U/L |
| CBC | Complete Blood Count | CLINICALStandard lab ranges | OPTIMALMid-range; WBC 4.5–6.0 |
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⚠ Optimal ranges reflect functional/longevity medicine targets. SS-31 is not FDA-approved. Cardiac biomarkers should be interpreted with a cardiologist if any abnormalities are present at baseline.
08 — Cycle Protocol
Cycle Length, Frequency & Timing
▸ How Long to Cycle
CLINICAL TRIAL
4–12 Weeks
Phase 2/3 trials used 4–12 week dosing windows; some chronic dosing studies extended to 6 months in mitochondrial myopathy.
PRACTITIONER CONSENSUS
8–12 Weeks
Most practitioners run 8–12 week cycles with a 4–8 week break. Some longevity protocols use continuous low-dose cycling given the strong safety profile.
SS-31 has shown no tolerance or desensitization in research literature. Its mitochondrial accumulation is rapid (within minutes) and sustained. Given its short plasma half-life, consistent daily dosing is more important than with longer-acting peptides.
▸ Frequency & Timing
| Variable | Recommendation | Why |
| Frequency | Daily (7×/week) | SS-31 has a very short plasma half-life (~30 min). Daily dosing maintains mitochondrial cardiolipin protection continuously. Clinical trials all used daily dosing. |
| Fasted vs Fed | ~ Either acceptable | SS-31's mechanism is not insulin-dependent. It goes directly to mitochondria regardless of metabolic state. Fasted AM is conventional but no strong preference in the data. |
| Morning (AM) | ✓ Preferred | Morning dosing aligns with circadian mitochondrial activity peaks and ensures cardioprotection is active during the metabolically active daytime period. |
| Pre-exercise | ✓ Strongly considered | Dosing 20–30 min before training maximizes mitochondrial protection during the oxidative stress of exercise — directly aligning with SS-31's core mechanism. |
| Wait to eat | ~ Not critical | No evidence that food intake affects absorption or efficacy. Eat normally after injection. |
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