Glycine vs L-Tyrosine

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

GlycineL-Tyrosine
CategoryAmino AcidsAmino Acids
Standard Dose3-5g daily500-2000mg daily
Timing3g before bed for sleep (core body temperature reduction). Divided doses during day for glutathione support. Powder in water has a mildly sweet taste.Morning on empty stomach (competes with other large neutral amino acids for BBB transport). 30-60 min before stressful tasks or exercise.
Cycle DurationongoingAs needed or cycle 4-8 weeks on, 2 weeks off
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-Tyrosine

Amino Acids

Mechanism

L-Tyrosine is the precursor amino acid for catecholamine neurotransmitter synthesis: tyrosine hydroxylase converts tyrosine to L-DOPA (rate-limiting step), which is then converted to dopamine, norepinephrine, and epinephrine. It is also the precursor for thyroid hormones (iodination of tyrosine residues on thyroglobulin produces T3/T4) and melanin (via tyrosinase). Under conditions of acute stress, catecholamine turnover increases dramatically, depleting brain tyrosine pools. Supplementation provides substrate to maintain catecholamine synthesis during stress, sleep deprivation, cold exposure, and cognitive demand.

Standard Dosing

500-2000mg daily

Timing

Morning on empty stomach (competes with other large neutral amino acids for BBB transport). 30-60 min before stressful tasks or exercise.

Cycle Duration

As needed or cycle 4-8 weeks on, 2 weeks off

Side Effects

  • Headache
  • GI upset
  • Irritability
  • Anxiety (excess catecholamines)
  • Insomnia if taken late
  • Heart palpitations (high doses)

Contraindications

  • MAO inhibitor therapy
  • Hyperthyroidism
  • Melanoma (tyrosine is a melanin precursor)
  • Phenylketonuria (tyrosine from phenylalanine metabolism)

Best Stacking Partners

B-Complex (B6 is cofactor for DOPA decarboxylase)Vitamin C (cofactor for dopamine beta-hydroxylase)RhodiolaCaffeine

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