Researchers studying the GLP-1 hormone — the same one that prescription weight loss drugs try to replicate — have identified a natural combination of compounds that supports this hormone without injections or pharmaceutical side effects.
Over the past two years, a category of natural compounds has been rebranded in mainstream coverage as "nature's GLP-1" — a label that emerged as researchers began documenting how certain plant-derived ingredients support the same GLP-1 hormone pathway that prescription drugs attempt to replicate. But the comparison rarely goes beyond the headline.
What the research actually shows is more nuanced. GLP-1 and GIP are two satiety hormones produced naturally in the gut, and their function determines whether the brain receives the signal to burn fat or to store it. After 40, these hormone levels begin to decline — partly due to estrogen changes, partly due to modern food preservatives and processing toxins that researchers have linked to damage in the cells responsible for producing them. When the signal weakens, the body shifts into storage mode regardless of effort.
This is where a specific combination of compounds — found in a traditional Okinawa gelatin recipe documented by researchers studying Blue Zone longevity — has drawn renewed scientific attention. The combination includes a natural ingredient that Harvard endocrinologists have called "nature's GLP-1" for its effect on the AMPK enzyme, alongside four other compounds that appear to address GLP-1 production from different angles.
The full explanation — including why the women of Okinawa maintain GLP-1 levels four times higher than the American average past age 60 — is in the video below. It runs without sign-up and reaches the core science within the first few minutes.
Researchers have identified specific patterns that often appear when satiety hormone production drops. Recognizing these patterns is the first step in understanding whether a natural approach might apply to you.
A Columbia-trained physician walks through the Okinawa research and the natural compounds that support GLP-1 production — free, no sign-up
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