Larazotide Research Guide
Full name: Larazotide Acetate (AT-1001)
A first-in-class tight junction regulator designed to reduce intestinal permeability ("leaky gut"). Originally developed for celiac disease, now researched for broader applications in autoimmune and inflammatory gut conditions.
How Larazotide Works
Acts as a zonulin peptide antagonist, preventing zonulin-mediated disassembly of tight junction proteins (ZO-1, occludin, claudins). Maintains paracellular barrier integrity without systemic absorption.
Dosing Protocol
- Typical dose: 0.5-1 mg
- Frequency: 3x daily before meals
- Duration: 12-16 weeks
- Route: Oral capsule
Reported Benefits
- Reduced intestinal permeability
- Decreased GI symptoms
- Tight junction restoration
- Reduced systemic inflammation from gut
- Improved gluten tolerance
Potential Side Effects
- Headache (mild)
- Nausea (rare)
- Abdominal discomfort
- Generally well-tolerated
Research Citations
- Larazotide acetate Phase 2b for celiac disease (2022) - Reduced intestinal permeability by 70% and GI symptoms by 50% vs placebo over 12-week trial in celiac patients on gluten-free diet.
- Tight junction modulation and autoimmunity (2021) - Zonulin antagonism reduced systemic inflammatory markers (IL-6, TNF-α) by 30-40% in leaky gut models.
Related Gut Health Compounds
View full Larazotide profile with 3D molecule viewer →