Side-by-side comparison of mechanisms, dosing, interactions, and stacking potential.
| L-Tyrosine | Taurine | |
|---|---|---|
| Category | Amino Acids | Amino Acids |
| Standard Dose | 500-2000mg daily | 1000-3000mg daily |
| Timing | Morning on empty stomach (competes with other large neutral amino acids for BBB transport). 30-60 min before stressful tasks or exercise. | Flexible. Evening preferred for sleep/relaxation benefits. Pre-workout for cardiac and exercise performance benefits. |
| Cycle Duration | As needed or cycle 4-8 weeks on, 2 weeks off | ongoing |
| Evidence Level | strong_human | strong_human |
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.
500-2000mg daily
Morning on empty stomach (competes with other large neutral amino acids for BBB transport). 30-60 min before stressful tasks or exercise.
As needed or cycle 4-8 weeks on, 2 weeks off
Taurine is a sulfonic acid amino acid (not incorporated into proteins) with diverse physiological roles. It is the most abundant free amino acid in excitable tissues (heart, brain, retina, muscle). Mechanisms: GABA-A receptor agonism (inhibitory neurotransmission), glycine receptor agonism, osmoregulation (cell volume regulation via taurine transporter TauT), bile acid conjugation (taurocholate formation for fat digestion), calcium handling in cardiomyocytes (modulates RyR2/SERCA2a), mitochondrial protein synthesis (taurine modification of mitochondrial tRNA), and potent antioxidant (directly scavenges HOCl, stabilizes membranes). Recently identified as a longevity-associated molecule — taurine levels decline with age and supplementation extends lifespan in mice.
1000-3000mg daily
Flexible. Evening preferred for sleep/relaxation benefits. Pre-workout for cardiac and exercise performance benefits.
ongoing
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