The Nootropic Cofactor that comes from Beer AND Boobies
This fish oil and B Vitamin cofactor is a promising agent to improve memory via RNA mechanisms.
In human studies, Uridine has a positive effect on depression and bipolar disorder, among other things.
This article is mostly going to focus on decoding what the human studies are saying about Uridine and how this squares up with the anecdotal experiences of Biohackers online.
Vs Bipolar Disorder
Those yo-yo-ing between rage and blind optimism may find Uridine transformational. An American 2011 human study done on Uridine, conducted over 6 weeks on a small group of adolescents, suggested it’s a mitochondrial hack for a healthy psyche:
The collective evidence for mitochondrial dysfunction in bipolar disorder suggests a potential role for uridine in the treatment armamentarium. This evidence includes the co-morbidity of mood disorders with mitochondrial disorders… Rational development of new treatments for bipolar disorder would include compounds designed to normalize the bioenergetic abnormalities associated with mitochondrial dysfunction…
It concluded:
In this pilot case series, uridine was efficacious and well tolerated by study participants. Rapid onset of action may be a distinguishing feature of uridine.
Vs Depression
While the Children’s Depression Rating Scale scores lowered (which is an improvement) over 6 weeks in the human trial, the study’s conclusion is quite bearish:
Uridine should not enter clinical practice as a primary treatment for depressed adolescents with bipolar disorder until randomized placebo-controlled trials have been performed to confirm its efficacy.
It has a synergistic antidepressant effect in combination with omega-3s. From a 2005 animal study:
Uridine and [omega-3 fatty acids] each have antidepressant-like effects in rats. Less of each agent is required for effectiveness when the treatments are administered together.
Dr. Douglas Kondo and Dr. Perry Renshaw of Salt Lake City, as reported on in 2010, used Uridine and Creatine to treat patients. To quote Dr. Renshaw:
“We’re reducing depressive symptoms by at least 50 percent within a couple of weeks… The two things that are remarkable, is one: it’s a very large effect; and two: it’s happening very quickly.”
A Synaptic Hack
Uridine is hypothesized, in a 2010 American paper (Nutritional modifiers of aging brain function: use of uridine and other phosphatide precursors to increase formation of brain synapses) to aid synaptic function by providing phosphatidylcholine; it’s a promising building block of membranes and dendrites which aid synaptic function. The researchers concluded in the Abstract of the paper:
If similar increases occur in human brain, administration of these compounds to patients with diseases that cause loss of brain synapses, such as Alzheimer’s disease, could be beneficial.
Vs Alzheimer’s
Uridine’s benefit to those suffering from or trying to prevent Alzheimer’s disease is at this point mostly hypothetical. In the limited rat studies in regards to Alzheimer’s, Uridine was just one of the multiple dietary factors that had an overall helpful effect.
Cognitive Enhancer
In a 2011 Israeli study 26 elderly human participants experienced after 12 weeks of supplementation…
A significant improvement in memory abilities (recall, recognition, and spatial short term) was observed following 2 weeks of Cognitex treatment… Attention (sustained and focused), visual learning, and activities of daily living (executive functions and mental flexibility) were improved as well following this short supplementation period…
It concluded:
The results indicate that the nutritional supplement may improve cognitive performance in elderly with memory complaints…
Memory Enhancer
Another animal study (Dietary uridine enhances the improvement in learning and memory produced by administering DHA to gerbils) indicated Uridine’s potential as a memory-enhancing agent in combination with DHA, from its abstract:
These findings demonstrate that a treatment that increases synaptic membrane content can enhance cognitive functions in normal animals.
This is exciting because most memory-enhancing smart drugs are just demonstrated as aiding the failing memories of the elderly whereas this study is saying that Uridine improved the memories of healthy adults from baseline.
One self-experimenter reported:
“I’ve personally noticed a gradual improvement in memory retention and flexibility of thinking, also mood stabilization and a certain degree of improvement in thinking skills. It’s very subtle, however the gains are really remarkable when I look back over the time period from when I started to now. In a way of putting it, for the sake of verbosity, the long term memories formed over the period of this stack is more mentally accessible, especially with very detailed subjects.”
Sources
Beer seems to be the best food source of Uridine with approximately 100 milligrams per liter, a Japanese study found that the alcohol content did not affect the absorption of Uridine. Breast milk and infant formula are also rich in Uridine.
However, you would have to drink a lot of beer (or breast milk!) to get the 500–1000 milligrams daily that’s been demonstrated to have Nootropic effects. In supplemental form, it’s a little more expensive with a one-month supply running around $30 capsuled (powdered it’s cheaper).
Downloadable Uridine?
You may be interested in taking it as an infoceutical — a non-pharmacological, side-effect-free version of the supplement that takes advantage of the phenomenon of water memory — which is imprinted on water via quantum collocation and electromagnetism using this device…
Infocueticals typically have 1/3 or half the effect of the actual medicine being imprinted. If you’re skeptical of Infopathy that’s understandable, it’s a game-changing application of a little-known scientific phenomenon. But I’d urge you to evaluate the scientific evidence (presented in my biohacker review) that downloadable medicine is no longer science fiction…
Citicoline
An MIT study demonstrated that Citicoline is a Uridine source:
Plasma uridine was elevated significantly for 5–6 hr after all three [citicoline] doses, increasing by as much as 70–90% after the 500 mg dose, and by 100–120% after the 2000 mg dose.
Uridine supplementation itself is a relatively unproven biohacking tool, while in contrast, Citicoline has over 50 human clinical trials and I see a whole lot more value in Citicoline than Uridine. Unless you are just an insatiable self-experimenter, who needs to try every sexy new Nootropic molecule, I’d encourage you to go with Citicoline as your uridine source which in supplemental form starts at $20.
A DNA Hack
Uridine promotes DNA repair in combination with B Vitamins, specifically B12 and B9 (Folate).
There seems to be some question and debate as to whether RNA-rich foods like…
* Liver
* Fish
* Broccoli
…are also veritable sources of Uridine. However, there’s an absence of a good study that demonstrates Uridine in the blood plasma of human participants after consuming these dietary sources. The Uridine cheerleaders online are all reporting positive effects from consuming it in supplemental form. So this is one Nootropic you’ll probably need to take in the supplemental form if you want its purported benefits.
Sleep
For some, it’s quite a sleep hack:
“Seems to (on an unpredictable basis) help me need less sleep. Oh, and if I am ever sleep deprived, uridine completely picks me up and helps me feel better.”
While at least a handful of others report that it causes various degrees of tiredness:
“…I had to stop taking it after I almost fell asleep while driving.”
From a Japanese review of Uridine:
This review deals with the concept of sleep mechanism based on our uridine receptor theory. It is well established that uridine is one of the sleep-promoting substances… We propose here that the induction of sleep may be mediated by uridine through uridine receptor in the CNS, although the structure of uridine receptor is not yet elucidated.
Mechanism of Action
Uridine can pass the blood-brain barrier and is uptaken via an equilibrative and a concentrative transporter.
A 2006 Swiss-German paper on the effects of a Uridine-rich stack supplement on HIV-infected patients has some useful passages regarding its mechanism:
Exogenous uridine supplementation might prevent uridine depletion at the cellular level, as the key enzyme of endogenous pyrimidine synthesis is also encoded by mitochondrial DNA and therefore might be affected by mitochondrial DNA depletion.
UMP vs TAU
All Uridine is not created equal…
- Uridine-5'-Monophosphate (UMP) is the most common supplemental form, it’s water-soluble (take it with just a glass of water) and can be taken sublingually. According to anecdotal reports, it’s the most effective form.
- Triacetyluridine (TAU) is fat-soluble so take it with a meal or fish oil capsules.
Even considering the lower bioavailability of UMP it’s still a better value as a supplement than TAU. So unless you are just feigning for tri-acetyls UMP is clearly the best option.
The Uridine Stack
A Longecity moderator and originator of an epic discourse about Uridine, who goes by the handle Mr. Happy proposed stacking:
- 150–250 milligrams -5′-Monophosphate (UMP)
- >700 milligrams DHA + >300 milligrams EPA
- 150 milligrams Alpha GPC
The self-experimenters on Reddit give mixed reports of the experiential effects of this stack; from very enthusiastic…
“I’ve completely cut caffeine from my diet. The “energy” and alertness this stuff gives is way better. It’s a calm, stable, mental awakening. Nice mood lift and stabilization.”
“I became extremely drowsy and wanted to nap/sleep all day.”
You can order it stacked from DoubleWoodSupplements.com, a purveyor of pharmaceutical-grade Nootropics. At its low price point, it seems worth trying to me.
Recommended Daily
Cofactors
Fish Oil
There seems to be a consensus that Uridine should be taken with DHA and EPA, in fact, the presence of Uridine improves the utilization of DHA by the brain.
Choline
It has a similar effect on choline and phosphocholine utilization. From the abstract of a 2004 Harvard animal study:
These results show that oral UMP, a uridine source, enhances the synthesis of CDP-choline, the immediate precursor of [phosphocholine]
B Vitamins
Uridine accelerates the DNA repair processes that require Vitamin B9 and Vitamin B12, for the maximum benefit the active forms are recommended Methylfolate (B9) and Methylcobalamin (B12).
Conflicts
A Canadian paper and a 2006 patent application indicated a conflict with and treatment potential for the withdrawals of Nicotine, so while less proven than a lot of other options out there, it’s worth considering if you are a frustrated smoker who’s tried everything to quit smoking.
Anecdotally, supplementing Uridine while consuming moderate to high levels of caffeine results in unpleasant irritability and anxiety attacks. At least a few users have reported on Reddit that combining caffeine with Uridine has a disastrous effect on sleep quality.
Conclusion and a Rant
A debate of the potential merits of Uridine produced a 93-page thread on Longecity while in stark contrast there was, at the time, just a single human study conducted on it.
In a Nootriment article, they called Uridine…
A must-have Nootropic in your stack.
Which I thought was a little crazy, since when is a molecule with just a single human study a must-have!? In the best-selling Trust Me, I’m Lying, the author describes how something undeserving will go a little viral and become popular on Reddit, social media, or a forum, and journalists or bloggers will pick up the story and promote it to a wider audience on a more popular news site. I think we are seeing that somewhat in the Biohacking space online.
So I encourage you to practice some rationality while researching your Biohacking. To this point, a 2011 Hungarian paper emphasized how little is known about Uridine:
Information only starts to be accumulating on potential mechanisms of these uridine actions. Some data are available on the topographical distribution of pyrimidine receptors and binding sites in the brain, however, their exact role in neuronal functions is not established yet.
So…
Don’t trust me.
Definitely don’t trust Nootriment which is a content farm site that just anonymously publishes a bunch of articles full of affiliate links.
I implore you to search Pubmed and make your decisions about what researchers are saying about a given Nootropic. Uridine is not a must-have Nootropic, it’s something to watch the science on as it comes out and maybe self-experiment with if you have a higher risk tolerance and unquenchable pharmacological curiosity.