Berberine Research Guide
Full name: Berberine HCl
A plant alkaloid extracted from Berberis species, popularly called "nature's metformin." Widely used by biohackers for blood sugar control, lipid management, and metabolic health, with effects comparable to some pharmaceutical agents in trials.
How Berberine Works
Activates AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), the cellular energy sensor, improving insulin sensitivity, reducing hepatic glucose production, lowering LDL cholesterol, and favorably shifting the gut microbiome.
Dosing Protocol
- Typical dose: 500 mg, 2-3x per day
- Frequency: 2-3x daily with meals
- Duration: Ongoing or cycled
- Route: Oral capsule
Reported Benefits
- Improved insulin sensitivity
- Lower fasting blood glucose
- Reduced LDL and triglycerides
- AMPK activation (exercise-mimetic)
- Gut microbiome support
- Modest weight/waist reduction
Potential Side Effects
- GI upset (cramping, diarrhea, constipation)
- Low blood sugar when combined with meds
- Drug interactions (CYP3A4)
- Not for pregnancy/nursing
Research Citations
- Berberine vs metformin for type 2 diabetes (2020) - Berberine produced comparable reductions in HbA1c and fasting glucose to metformin over 3 months.
- Berberine and lipid metabolism (2019) - Reduced total cholesterol, LDL, and triglycerides via LDL-receptor upregulation independent of statin pathways.
Related Weight Management Compounds
View full Berberine profile with 3D molecule viewer →