Betaine (TMG / Trimethylglycine) vs L-Citrulline

Side-by-side comparison of mechanisms, dosing, interactions, and stacking potential.

✅ Stacking Partners — These compounds are commonly used together and may have synergistic effects.
Betaine (TMG / Trimethylglycine)L-Citrulline
CategoryTraining CompoundsAmino Acids
Standard Dose2500mg (2.5g) daily3-6g L-citrulline daily or 6-8g citrulline malate
TimingSplit AM/PM or pre-workout. When used as methyl donor with NMN/NR, take with the NAD+ precursor.30-60 minutes pre-workout for exercise performance. For blood pressure: split AM/PM doses. Powder form in water.
Cycle Durationongoingongoing
Evidence Levelmoderate_humanstrong_human

Mechanism

Betaine (trimethylglycine) serves as a methyl donor in the betaine-homocysteine methyltransferase (BHMT) reaction, converting homocysteine to methionine — this is the alternative methyl cycle pathway (parallel to the folate-dependent methionine synthase pathway). It functions as an osmolyte, protecting cells from osmotic stress by maintaining intracellular water balance (critical for kidney medulla and muscle cells). Athletic performance benefits likely derive from enhanced creatine synthesis (methyl donation), improved power output via osmotic cell protection, and reduced homocysteine-mediated vascular impairment.

Standard Dosing

2500mg (2.5g) daily

Timing

Split AM/PM or pre-workout. When used as methyl donor with NMN/NR, take with the NAD+ precursor.

Cycle Duration

ongoing

Side Effects

  • Fishy body odor (TMA production)
  • GI upset/diarrhea
  • Nausea
  • Methionine elevation (theoretical concern with chronic high-dose use in cancer context)

Contraindications

  • Trimethylaminuria (fish odor syndrome — impaired TMA metabolism)
  • Homocystinuria (under medical management — betaine is actually used therapeutically here, but dosing requires physician oversight)

Best Stacking Partners

NMN or NR (essential methyl replenishment)CreatineB-ComplexL-Citrulline
B

L-Citrulline

Amino Acids

Mechanism

L-Citrulline is converted to L-arginine in the kidneys via argininosuccinate synthase and argininosuccinate lyase (bypassing hepatic first-pass metabolism that degrades oral L-arginine). L-arginine is then the substrate for endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS), producing nitric oxide (NO). NO activates soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC), increasing cGMP, causing vascular smooth muscle relaxation and vasodilation. Citrulline also participates in the urea cycle (ammonia detoxification), and supplementation increases plasma arginine more effectively than arginine supplementation itself due to bypass of intestinal and hepatic arginase.

Standard Dosing

3-6g L-citrulline daily or 6-8g citrulline malate

Timing

30-60 minutes pre-workout for exercise performance. For blood pressure: split AM/PM doses. Powder form in water.

Cycle Duration

ongoing

Side Effects

  • Mild GI discomfort
  • Bloating
  • Headache (vasodilation)
  • Generally very well-tolerated even at high doses

Contraindications

  • Concurrent nitroglycerin/nitrate therapy
  • Severe hypotension
  • Urea cycle disorders (citrullinemia)

Best Stacking Partners

Beetroot Powder (nitrates — complementary NO pathway)L-Arginine (small dose)Pycnogenol (eNOS activator)Vitamin C

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