Glycine vs L-Citrulline

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

GlycineL-Citrulline
CategoryAmino AcidsAmino Acids
Standard Dose3-5g daily3-6g L-citrulline daily or 6-8g citrulline malate
Timing3g before bed for sleep (core body temperature reduction). Divided doses during day for glutathione support. Powder in water has a mildly sweet taste.30-60 minutes pre-workout for exercise performance. For blood pressure: split AM/PM doses. Powder form in water.
Cycle Durationongoingongoing
Evidence Levelstrong_humanstrong_human
A

Glycine

Amino Acids

Mechanism

Glycine is the simplest amino acid with profound neurological and metabolic roles. It is an inhibitory neurotransmitter acting at glycine receptors (strychnine-sensitive) in the brainstem and spinal cord, inducing a drop in core body temperature that facilitates sleep onset. It is also an obligatory co-agonist at the NMDA receptor glycine binding site, modulating excitatory neurotransmission. Metabolically, glycine is the rate-limiting amino acid for glutathione synthesis (glutathione = glycine + cysteine + glutamate), a key substrate for collagen synthesis (every 3rd amino acid), essential for creatine synthesis, bile acid conjugation, heme synthesis, and one-carbon metabolism.

Standard Dosing

3-5g daily

Timing

3g before bed for sleep (core body temperature reduction). Divided doses during day for glutathione support. Powder in water has a mildly sweet taste.

Cycle Duration

ongoing

Side Effects

  • Mild drowsiness
  • Soft stools at high doses
  • Nausea (rare)
  • Generally extremely well-tolerated

Contraindications

  • Very few absolute contraindications. Caution in severe renal disease.

Best Stacking Partners

NAC (for glutathione synthesis — GlyNAC protocol)Magnesium (for sleep)CollagenL-Theanine
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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