Overview
At a Glance
Klotho is a protein discovered in 1997 when researchers found that mice lacking the Klotho gene aged dramatically fast — developing arteriosclerosis, osteoporosis, skin atrophy, and emphysema within weeks. Conversely, overexpressing Klotho extends lifespan in mice by 20–30%. In humans, Klotho levels decline steadily with age, and higher circulating levels are associated with longer lifespan, better cognitive function, and reduced cardiovascular disease. Despite extraordinary preclinical promise, Klotho therapy is not yet available as a treatment. No exogenous Klotho product has entered human clinical trials. This is a "watch this space" article — the biology is compelling, but the therapy does not yet exist.
Klotho (α-Klotho) is a type I transmembrane protein that was identified in a landmark 1997 study by Makoto Kuro-o and colleagues. In what remains one of the most striking discoveries in aging biology, mice carrying a disrupted Klotho gene developed a syndrome resembling accelerated human aging: shortened lifespan (typically dying by 8–9 weeks), severe arteriosclerosis, osteoporosis, skin atrophy, pulmonary emphysema, infertility, and cognitive decline (Kuro-o et al., 1997). The protein was named after Clotho (Klotho), one of the three Moirai (Fates) in Greek mythology — the goddess who spins the thread of life.
The discovery established a single gene that, when disrupted, could trigger a broad multi-organ aging phenotype. Conversely, subsequent research demonstrated that mice engineered to overexpress Klotho lived approximately 20–30% longer than normal littermates, with reduced age-related pathology (Kurosu et al., 2005). These findings positioned Klotho as one of the most important longevity-associated genes identified to date.
Klotho exists in two functional forms: membrane-bound Klotho, which serves as an obligate co-receptor for fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF23) in the regulation of phosphate, vitamin D, and calcium homeostasis; and soluble Klotho (s-Klotho), which is released into the bloodstream through enzymatic cleavage by ADAM10 and ADAM17 proteases and functions as a circulating hormone with pleiotropic anti-aging effects (Yamazaki et al., 2010).
In humans, circulating Klotho levels decline significantly with age — beginning as early as the third decade of life. Epidemiological studies have linked higher Klotho levels to reduced all-cause mortality, better cognitive performance, lower cardiovascular disease risk, and preserved kidney function. A functional variant of the Klotho gene (KL-VS) has been associated with increased longevity in certain populations (Arking et al., 2002).
Klotho is not available as a therapeutic product. No recombinant Klotho protein, gene therapy, or small molecule Klotho enhancer has entered human clinical trials as of 2026. All current knowledge derives from preclinical research (animal models) and observational human studies measuring endogenous Klotho levels. This article reviews what is known and what is being explored.
Quick Facts
| Property | Details |
|---|---|
| Gene | KL (Klotho), chromosome 13q12 in humans |
| Protein type | Type I transmembrane protein (1,012 amino acids); also exists as soluble/secreted form |
| Molecular weight | ~130 kDa (membrane form); ~65–70 kDa (soluble fragments) |
| Primary expression | Kidney distal tubules, brain choroid plexus, parathyroid gland |
| Key function | FGF23 co-receptor (membrane); circulating anti-aging hormone (soluble) |
| Family members | α-Klotho, β-Klotho (FGF21/FGF19 co-receptor), γ-Klotho |
| Human trials | None for exogenous Klotho therapy (as of 2026) |
| Therapeutic status | Preclinical / research stage only |
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider.
How It Works
Understanding Klotho requires appreciating that it operates through at least two distinct biological modes — one as a membrane-anchored co-receptor with a specific signaling partner, and another as a shed, soluble hormone with wide-ranging systemic effects.
Membrane-Bound Klotho: The FGF23 Co-Receptor
In the kidney, Klotho is expressed primarily in the distal convoluted tubule, where it sits on the cell surface as a type I transmembrane protein. In this role, membrane Klotho forms a complex with fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) and serves as the obligate co-receptor for FGF23 — a hormone produced by osteocytes in bone (Kurosu et al., 2005).
The FGF23-Klotho-FGFR signaling axis is critical for mineral metabolism:
- Phosphate regulation: FGF23 signaling through Klotho suppresses reabsorption of phosphate in the proximal tubule by downregulating sodium-phosphate co-transporters (NaPi-2a and NaPi-2c). This promotes phosphate excretion and prevents hyperphosphatemia.
- Vitamin D regulation: FGF23-Klotho signaling suppresses 1α-hydroxylase (CYP27B1), reducing conversion of 25-hydroxyvitamin D to its active form (1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D). This creates a feedback loop that prevents vitamin D excess.
- Calcium homeostasis: Through its effects on vitamin D metabolism and direct actions on ion channels (particularly TRPV5 in the kidney), Klotho influences calcium reabsorption and systemic calcium balance.
Without membrane Klotho, FGF23 cannot effectively signal. This explains why Klotho-deficient mice develop severe hyperphosphatemia, hypervitaminosis D, and widespread vascular and soft tissue calcification — a phenotype that mirrors the premature aging syndrome observed in the original 1997 discovery (Kuro-o et al., 1997).
Soluble Klotho: The Circulating Anti-Aging Factor
The extracellular domain of membrane Klotho is cleaved by ADAM10 and ADAM17 proteases (also called α-secretases) and released into the blood, cerebrospinal fluid, and urine as soluble Klotho (s-Klotho). This soluble form functions as a circulating hormone with effects throughout the body that extend well beyond mineral metabolism (Yamazaki et al., 2010).
Key signaling activities of soluble Klotho include:
- Anti-oxidant effects: s-Klotho enhances the expression of manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) and other antioxidant enzymes, reducing oxidative stress at the cellular level. This is mediated in part through FoxO transcription factor activation.
- Wnt signaling suppression: s-Klotho binds directly to Wnt ligands and inhibits Wnt signaling. Excessive Wnt activation drives cellular senescence and fibrosis in aged tissues. By restraining this pathway, Klotho may slow age-related tissue degeneration.
- Insulin/IGF-1 signaling modulation: Klotho overexpression in mice suppresses insulin and IGF-1 signaling, a mechanism associated with lifespan extension across multiple species (consistent with the conserved insulin/IGF-1 longevity pathway). This may contribute to improved metabolic health and stress resistance (Kurosu et al., 2005).
- Anti-inflammatory effects: s-Klotho suppresses NF-κB signaling and reduces expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines, including TNF-α and IL-6. This anti-inflammatory function is particularly relevant in the context of chronic low-grade inflammation associated with aging ("inflammaging").
- Anti-fibrotic effects: Klotho inhibits TGF-β1 signaling, a major driver of fibrosis in the kidney, heart, and lung. This positions Klotho as a potential endogenous protector against age-related organ fibrosis (Hu et al., 2011).
- Ion channel regulation: s-Klotho regulates the activity of ion channels including TRPV5 (calcium), ROMK (potassium), and NaPi-2a (phosphate) through enzymatic modification of their glycan structures.
Klotho Family Members
| Family Member | Primary Co-Receptor Role | Key Tissues | Primary Functions |
|---|---|---|---|
| α-Klotho | FGF23 co-receptor | Kidney, brain (choroid plexus), parathyroid | Mineral metabolism, anti-aging, neuroprotection |
| β-Klotho | FGF21 and FGF19 co-receptor | Liver, adipose tissue, pancreas | Bile acid metabolism, glucose homeostasis, energy balance |
| γ-Klotho (LCTL) | Less characterized | Kidney, skin, adipose | Under investigation; limited functional data |
β-Klotho is increasingly recognized as important in metabolic health, serving as the co-receptor for FGF21 (a metabolic hormone linked to fasting, weight loss, and insulin sensitivity) and FGF19 (which regulates bile acid synthesis). However, the anti-aging and longevity research has focused primarily on α-Klotho.
Why Klotho Declines With Age
Circulating Klotho levels decline progressively with aging in humans. The mechanisms driving this decline are not fully understood but likely include:
- Reduced renal expression: As the kidneys age and accumulate damage, Klotho gene expression in the distal tubules decreases. Chronic kidney disease (CKD) dramatically accelerates Klotho loss.
- Epigenetic silencing: Promoter hypermethylation of the Klotho gene has been observed in aging tissues and in various disease states, effectively silencing its expression.
- Chronic inflammation: Pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-6) suppress Klotho expression, creating a vicious cycle: inflammation reduces Klotho, and reduced Klotho permits more inflammation.
- Oxidative stress: Reactive oxygen species (ROS) suppress Klotho transcription, further linking age-related oxidative damage to Klotho decline.
Go Deeper
- Kuro-o et al. (1997) — "Mutation of the mouse klotho gene leads to a syndrome resembling ageing" — Nature
- Kurosu et al. (2005) — "Suppression of aging in mice by the hormone Klotho" — Science
- Yamazaki et al. (2010) — "Establishment of sandwich ELISA for soluble alpha-Klotho" — BBRC
- Xu & Sun (2015) — "Molecular basis of Klotho: from gene to function in aging" — Current Opinion in Nephrology
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider.
Research
The Founding Discovery: Premature Aging (1997)
The Klotho field began with the accidental creation of a mouse strain carrying a disrupted Klotho gene. These mice developed a syndrome strikingly similar to human aging: shortened lifespan (8–9 weeks vs. ~2 years normal), arteriosclerosis, osteoporosis, skin atrophy, pulmonary emphysema, ectopic calcification, gonadal atrophy, thymic involution, and hearing loss. This was the first demonstration that a single gene disruption could produce a multi-organ aging phenotype in mammals (Kuro-o et al., 1997).
Lifespan Extension: Klotho Overexpression (2005)
In a complementary study, Kurosu and colleagues demonstrated that transgenic mice overexpressing Klotho lived approximately 20–30% longer than wild-type controls. These mice showed reduced insulin/IGF-1 signaling — a conserved longevity mechanism found in species from worms to primates — and were more resistant to oxidative stress. This established that Klotho is not merely necessary for normal aging but that increased Klotho can actively extend lifespan (Kurosu et al., 2005).
Cognitive Enhancement (2014)
One of the most provocative findings in Klotho research came from Dena Dubal's laboratory. Lifelong genetic overexpression of Klotho in mice enhanced synaptic plasticity and cognition across the lifespan. Critically, a single systemic injection of the Klotho protein fragment (KL-F) was sufficient to enhance spatial learning and memory in both young and aged wild-type mice — demonstrating that acute Klotho administration, not just lifelong overexpression, could improve brain function (Dubal et al., 2014).
The cognitive effects were associated with increased GluN2B subunit expression at NMDA receptors in the hippocampus, enhancing long-term potentiation (LTP) — the cellular mechanism underlying learning and memory. This study opened the possibility that Klotho therapy could be used to treat age-related cognitive decline and potentially neurodegenerative diseases.
Human Longevity Genetics: The KL-VS Variant
In human populations, a functional variant of the Klotho gene known as KL-VS (containing two amino acid substitutions: F352V and C370S) has been associated with longevity and cognitive function. Heterozygous carriers of KL-VS (one copy) show higher circulating Klotho levels, better cognitive performance, greater cortical volume, and in some studies, increased lifespan. Homozygous carriers (two copies), paradoxically, may show reduced Klotho levels and potential health disadvantages (Arking et al., 2002).
This heterozygote advantage supports the concept that moderately elevated Klotho is beneficial for human health and longevity — providing genetic evidence consistent with the animal data.
Kidney Protection
Klotho is most abundantly expressed in the kidney, and its decline is one of the earliest and most sensitive markers of chronic kidney disease (CKD). Preclinical studies demonstrate that:
- Klotho levels fall before traditional markers of kidney damage (creatinine, GFR) become abnormal
- Exogenous Klotho administration protects against acute kidney injury (AKI) in animal models by reducing oxidative stress, inflammation, and fibrosis
- Klotho supplementation attenuates renal fibrosis by inhibiting TGF-β1 signaling
- CKD patients have dramatically reduced circulating Klotho, and lower Klotho levels predict faster disease progression and cardiovascular events (Hu et al., 2011)
Cardiovascular Protection
Epidemiological data from the InCHIANTI study and other cohorts demonstrated that lower plasma Klotho levels are independently associated with increased cardiovascular disease risk, including coronary artery disease, heart failure, and vascular calcification (Semba et al., 2011). In animal models, Klotho overexpression protects against endothelial dysfunction, atherosclerosis, and cardiac hypertrophy.
Brain and Neurodegeneration
Beyond the acute cognitive enhancement findings, Klotho has been implicated in protection against neurodegenerative processes. Klotho is expressed in the brain's choroid plexus and may reach the brain parenchyma through the cerebrospinal fluid. Reduced Klotho expression has been observed in Alzheimer's disease models, and Klotho overexpression reduces amyloid-beta toxicity and tau phosphorylation in preclinical studies (Vo et al., 2018).
Cancer Biology
Klotho's role in cancer is complex and context-dependent. In many tumor types (breast, pancreatic, lung, colorectal), Klotho gene expression is silenced by promoter hypermethylation, and restoration of Klotho suppresses tumor growth — suggesting a tumor suppressor function. Klotho may inhibit cancer through modulation of IGF-1 signaling, Wnt/β-catenin signaling, and FGF pathway activity. However, the relationship is not uniformly protective across all cancer types, and some contexts show more complex interactions (Kim et al., 2015).
Comparison: Klotho vs. Other Longevity Targets
| Target | Type | Lifespan Effect (Mice) | Cognitive Effect | Therapeutic Stage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Klotho | Transmembrane protein / circulating hormone | +20–30% (overexpression) | Enhanced (acute injection) | Preclinical only |
| Rapamycin (mTOR) | Small molecule (mTOR inhibitor) | +9–14% | Variable | Approved (transplant); longevity trials early stage |
| NAD+ precursors (NMN/NR) | Metabolic supplement | Healthspan improvement; lifespan data mixed | Some improvement | Supplements available; clinical trials ongoing |
| Metformin | Small molecule (AMPK activator) | +5–6% (some strains) | Limited data | TAME trial ongoing (human longevity) |
| Senolytics (D+Q) | Small molecule combination | Healthspan improvement | Limited data | Early human trials |
Limitations of the Research
- No human interventional trials: All therapeutic data for exogenous Klotho comes from animal models. No human has received Klotho protein, Klotho gene therapy, or a Klotho-enhancing drug in a clinical trial.
- Translation uncertainty: Mouse aging biology does not always translate to humans. The dramatic premature aging phenotype of Klotho-knockout mice may partly reflect extreme phosphate toxicity rather than pure aging.
- Bioassay limitations: Measuring soluble Klotho in human blood has been technically challenging, with variability between assays complicating epidemiological studies.
- Cancer complexity: While Klotho appears to function as a tumor suppressor in many contexts, the effects of systemic Klotho elevation on cancer risk in humans are unknown.
- Delivery challenges: Klotho is a large protein (~130 kDa), making drug delivery, blood-brain barrier penetration, and pharmacokinetic optimization significant therapeutic hurdles.
Further Reading
- Kuro-o et al. (1997) — Klotho gene discovery and premature aging — Nature
- Kurosu et al. (2005) — Klotho overexpression extends lifespan — Science
- Dubal et al. (2014) — Klotho enhances cognition — Cell Reports
- Hu et al. (2011) — Klotho and kidney disease — Kidney International
- Semba et al. (2011) — Plasma Klotho and cardiovascular disease — JCEM
- Drew et al. (2022) — Klotho as a longevity factor — Review
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider.
Uses
Unlike many other compounds covered on GLPbase, Klotho is not available as a therapeutic product in any form — not as a prescription, supplement, research chemical, or compounded preparation. Any product sold online claiming to be "Klotho" or "Klotho peptide" should be viewed with extreme skepticism. The information below describes research-stage applications and natural strategies to support endogenous Klotho levels.
Potential Therapeutic Applications (Research Stage)
The following applications are under active preclinical investigation. None have been validated in human clinical trials.
| Application | Evidence Stage | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Age-related cognitive decline | Preclinical (mice) | Acute Klotho injection improved spatial learning and memory in young and aged mice. Enhanced NMDA receptor function and LTP in hippocampus (Dubal et al., 2014). |
| Chronic kidney disease | Preclinical (rodents) | Klotho replacement attenuated renal fibrosis, reduced AKI severity, and slowed CKD progression in animal models (Hu et al., 2011). |
| Cardiovascular disease | Epidemiological + preclinical | Low Klotho associated with higher CVD risk in humans. Klotho overexpression reduces atherosclerosis and cardiac hypertrophy in mice (Semba et al., 2011). |
| Neurodegenerative diseases | Preclinical | Reduced Klotho in Alzheimer's models. Klotho overexpression attenuates amyloid-beta toxicity and neuroinflammation (Vo et al., 2018). |
| Pulmonary fibrosis | Preclinical | Klotho deficiency exacerbates lung fibrosis. Supplementation reduces TGF-β1-mediated fibrotic pathways in animal models. |
| Longevity / anti-aging | Preclinical (transgenic mice) | Klotho overexpression extended mouse lifespan by 20–30% (Kurosu et al., 2005). |
Therapeutic Approaches Being Explored
- Recombinant Klotho protein: Direct administration of soluble Klotho protein or its active fragments (e.g., KL1 domain). The approach used in the Dubal cognitive enhancement study. Challenges include protein stability, short half-life, manufacturing cost, and delivery to target tissues (especially the brain).
- Klotho gene therapy: Viral vector-mediated delivery of the Klotho gene to increase endogenous production. AAV-based approaches have shown efficacy in animal models of kidney disease. Long-term safety and durability questions remain.
- Small molecules that upregulate endogenous Klotho: Identifying existing or novel drugs that increase Klotho gene expression. Several candidates exist (see below), but none are specifically developed or approved for this purpose.
Strategies to Support Endogenous Klotho Levels
While exogenous Klotho therapy is not available, certain lifestyle factors and existing medications have been associated with higher endogenous Klotho levels in human and animal studies:
| Strategy | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Regular exercise | Human observational + animal interventional | Aerobic and resistance exercise associated with higher circulating Klotho. Likely mediated through reduced inflammation, improved kidney function, and direct transcriptional effects. |
| Vitamin D supplementation | Human + animal | Vitamin D receptor activation upregulates Klotho gene expression in the kidney. Correcting vitamin D deficiency may restore suppressed Klotho levels. |
| PPAR-γ agonists (thiazolidinediones) | Animal + limited human | Pioglitazone and rosiglitazone increase Klotho expression in animal kidneys. These are prescription diabetes medications with their own risk profiles. |
| ACE inhibitors / ARBs | Animal + human observational | Renin-angiotensin system blockade has been associated with preserved Klotho levels, potentially through reduced renal inflammation and fibrosis. |
| Maintaining kidney health | Epidemiological | CKD is the strongest driver of Klotho decline. Preserving kidney function through blood pressure control, diabetes management, and avoiding nephrotoxins supports Klotho maintenance. |
| Reducing chronic inflammation | Mechanistic + observational | Pro-inflammatory cytokines suppress Klotho transcription. Anti-inflammatory lifestyle measures (diet, sleep, stress management) may indirectly support Klotho levels. |
Further Reading
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider.
Dosing
Unlike other compounds covered on GLPbase where dosing protocols exist, Klotho cannot be dosed because it is not available. There is no prescription Klotho, no compounded Klotho, no over-the-counter Klotho supplement, and no research-grade Klotho product intended for human self-administration. The section below is provided purely for scientific literacy — to explain what researchers have used in animal experiments. Do not attempt to obtain or self-administer any substance marketed as Klotho.
Preclinical Research Doses (Animal Studies Only)
| Study | Form | Dose | Route | Effect Observed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dubal et al. (2014) | Klotho protein fragment (KL-F, KL1 domain) | 10 µg/kg | Intraperitoneal (mice) | Enhanced spatial learning and memory; increased GluN2B/NMDA receptor expression in hippocampus |
| Hu et al. (kidney models) | Recombinant soluble Klotho | Variable (0.01–0.1 mg/kg) | Intravenous / intraperitoneal (rodents) | Reduced renal fibrosis, attenuated AKI severity, suppressed TGF-β1 signaling |
| Transgenic overexpression | Endogenous overexpression (genetic) | ~2–3x normal circulating levels | Constitutive (transgenic mice) | 20–30% lifespan extension, reduced age-related pathology |
| AAV gene therapy models | AAV-Klotho vector | Variable viral titers | Intravenous (rodents) | Sustained Klotho elevation, organ protection in CKD models |
Sources: Dubal et al. (2014) — Klotho fragment dosing and cognitive effects; Hu et al. (2011) — Recombinant Klotho in kidney models.
These doses are presented for scientific context only. They were administered to mice and rats under controlled laboratory conditions by trained researchers. They have no applicability to human self-administration.
Normal Human Klotho Levels
For reference, normal circulating soluble Klotho levels in healthy humans, as measured by ELISA, are approximately:
| Age Group | Typical s-Klotho Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Young adults (20–40) | ~600–1,000 pg/mL | Peak Klotho levels; gradual decline begins in 30s |
| Middle-aged (40–65) | ~400–800 pg/mL | Progressive age-related decline |
| Elderly (65+) | ~300–600 pg/mL | Significant decline; lower levels associated with worse health outcomes |
| CKD patients | Often <300 pg/mL | Dramatically reduced; correlates with disease severity |
Sources: Yamazaki et al. (2010) — Soluble Klotho measurement in humans; Drew et al. (2022) — Klotho as a longevity biomarker.
Note: Assay variability between commercial kits is significant. The ranges above are approximate and depend on the specific ELISA platform used.
Can You Test Your Klotho Levels?
Soluble Klotho can be measured from a blood sample using specialized ELISA assays. However:
- This is not a standard clinical lab test — it is not offered by most commercial laboratories
- Some research-oriented and longevity-medicine labs do offer s-Klotho testing
- Assay standardization remains a challenge — results may vary significantly between testing platforms
- There are no established clinical guidelines for interpreting Klotho levels or acting on results
- Knowing your Klotho level is currently more informational than actionable, since no Klotho-specific therapy exists
Further Reading
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider.
Results: What the Research Shows
The results below are from animal experiments and human observational/genetic studies. No human has received exogenous Klotho therapy. Anyone claiming to report "results" from Klotho supplementation is either misinformed or describing a fraudulent product.
Preclinical Results: What Klotho Does in Animal Models
| Domain | Key Finding | Study |
|---|---|---|
| Lifespan | 20–30% extension in transgenic mice overexpressing Klotho | Kurosu et al., 2005 |
| Cognition | Single injection of Klotho fragment enhanced learning and memory in young and aged mice | Dubal et al., 2014 |
| Kidney protection | Attenuated acute kidney injury severity; reduced renal fibrosis in CKD models | Hu et al., 2011 |
| Cardiovascular | Reduced atherosclerosis, cardiac hypertrophy, and vascular calcification in overexpressing mice | Multiple studies (reviewed in Drew et al., 2022) |
| Cancer | Tumor suppression in breast, pancreatic, lung, and colorectal cancer models when Klotho expression restored | Kim et al., 2015 |
| Bone health | Klotho deficiency causes severe osteoporosis; restoration normalizes bone mineral density | Kuro-o et al., 1997 |
Human Observational Results: What Higher Klotho Means
In humans, we cannot yet give Klotho — but we can measure it. What do higher endogenous Klotho levels predict?
| Outcome | Finding | Source |
|---|---|---|
| All-cause mortality | Lower Klotho levels independently predict higher all-cause mortality in community-dwelling adults | Semba et al., 2011 |
| Cardiovascular disease | Lower Klotho associated with increased risk of coronary artery disease, heart failure, and stroke | Semba et al., 2011 |
| Cognitive function | KL-VS heterozygote carriers show better cognitive performance across the lifespan | Arking et al., 2002 |
| Kidney function | Higher Klotho levels correlate with preserved GFR and slower CKD progression | Hu et al., 2011 |
| Longevity | KL-VS variant associated with extended lifespan in some populations | Arking et al., 2002 |
What Lifestyle Interventions Can Achieve
While we await Klotho therapeutics, the following strategies have demonstrated measurable effects on endogenous Klotho levels:
- Exercise: Regular aerobic exercise has been associated with 10–20% higher circulating Klotho in observational studies. Animal studies confirm exercise-induced Klotho upregulation in the kidney.
- Vitamin D repletion: Correcting vitamin D deficiency can increase Klotho expression through VDR-mediated transcription.
- Kidney function preservation: Since the kidney is the primary source of circulating Klotho, protecting kidney health through blood pressure control and metabolic health directly supports Klotho maintenance.
- Weight management: Obesity is associated with lower Klotho levels, potentially through chronic inflammation and metabolic dysfunction.
Important Interpretive Caveats
- Correlation is not causation: Human observational data shows that higher Klotho is associated with better outcomes — but we cannot yet prove that increasing Klotho causes better outcomes in humans.
- Confounding factors: People with higher Klotho levels may also have better kidney function, lower inflammation, and healthier lifestyles — making it difficult to isolate Klotho's independent contribution.
- Animal-to-human gap: The dramatic lifespan and cognitive effects in mice may not translate proportionally to humans. The mouse Klotho-deficiency phenotype may partly reflect extreme phosphate dysregulation rather than pure aging.
- Assay variability: Different studies use different Klotho assays, making cross-study comparisons challenging and absolute level cutoffs unreliable.
Further Reading
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider.
Side Effects
The Side Effect Profile Does Not Exist Yet
It is important to state clearly: there is no human side effect data for exogenous Klotho. No human clinical trial has been conducted. The information below represents theoretical considerations and observations from animal models — not a clinical adverse event profile.
Effects of Klotho Deficiency (From Animal Models)
Understanding what happens when Klotho is absent or severely reduced provides important context for the protein's biological significance:
| Consequence | Mechanism | Clinical Parallel |
|---|---|---|
| Severe hyperphosphatemia | Loss of FGF23 signaling; impaired renal phosphate excretion | Similar to advanced CKD mineral bone disorder |
| Vascular calcification | Phosphate-driven calcification; loss of vascular protection | Accelerated atherosclerosis and vascular stiffness |
| Osteoporosis | Disordered mineral metabolism; impaired bone turnover | Severe, early-onset bone loss |
| Skin atrophy | Loss of connective tissue maintenance | Premature skin aging, thinning |
| Pulmonary emphysema | Oxidative stress and inflammation in lung tissue | COPD-like pathology without smoke exposure |
| Cognitive decline | Reduced synaptic plasticity; neuroinflammation | Accelerated age-related cognitive impairment |
| Infertility | Gonadal atrophy | Premature reproductive aging |
Theoretical Risks of Exogenous Klotho
While Klotho is generally regarded as protective, theoretical safety concerns exist for any future Klotho therapy:
- Phosphate and mineral metabolism disruption: Klotho's role in FGF23 signaling means that excessive Klotho activity could theoretically cause hypophosphatemia (excessively low phosphate), disrupting bone mineralization, muscle function, and cellular energy metabolism. The physiological range matters.
- Vitamin D suppression: Klotho-FGF23 signaling suppresses active vitamin D production. Overactivation could lead to inappropriately low 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D levels, potentially causing hypocalcemia and impaired calcium absorption.
- Insulin/IGF-1 signaling trade-offs: Klotho's lifespan-extending mechanism involves suppressing insulin/IGF-1 signaling. While this is associated with longevity, excessive suppression of insulin signaling could theoretically impair glucose homeostasis — similar to the paradox of insulin sensitivity vs. insulin resistance in longevity research.
- Cancer considerations: Klotho appears to function as a tumor suppressor in most contexts. However, the effects of sustained systemic Klotho elevation on cancer risk are unknown. Any growth factor or signaling pathway modulator requires careful cancer safety evaluation.
- Immunological effects: Klotho modulates NF-κB and inflammatory signaling. Excessive immunosuppression could theoretically increase infection susceptibility, although this has not been observed in overexpressing mice.
- Protein therapy challenges: If administered as a recombinant protein, risks include immunogenicity (antibody formation against the foreign protein), allergic reactions, injection site reactions, and the general risks associated with biologic therapies.
No Known Drug Interactions
Because Klotho has not been administered to humans, no drug interaction data exists. Theoretical interactions to consider in future clinical development include:
- Phosphate binders: Could compound Klotho's phosphate-lowering effects
- Vitamin D supplements: Klotho-FGF23 signaling suppresses vitamin D activation — co-administration dynamics are unknown
- Drugs affecting kidney function: Since the kidney is the primary Klotho source, nephrotoxic drugs could reduce both endogenous Klotho and potentially alter the response to exogenous Klotho
Any product currently sold online as "Klotho supplement," "Klotho peptide," or "Klotho activator" is not an established therapeutic. Such products may contain unknown substances, have no quality control, and carry unpredictable risks. There is no legitimate consumer market for Klotho as of 2026.
Further Reading
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider.
Regulatory Status
FDA Status
Klotho has no FDA regulatory classification. Unlike peptides such as ipamorelin, sermorelin, or BPC-157, which have defined regulatory histories (approved, investigated, or classified for compounding), Klotho exists entirely outside the FDA's current therapeutic framework. No Investigational New Drug (IND) application for exogenous Klotho therapy has been publicly disclosed as of 2026.
| Category | Status |
|---|---|
| FDA-approved drug | No |
| IND / clinical trial | No publicly disclosed IND for Klotho protein or gene therapy |
| Compounding pharmacy availability | Not available; not listed as a bulk drug substance |
| Dietary supplement classification | No; Klotho is not a nutrient, vitamin, mineral, or herbal compound |
| Research chemical market | Recombinant Klotho available from laboratory suppliers for research use only (not for human use) |
| WADA prohibited list | Not specifically listed (not a known performance-enhancing substance category) |
Research-Grade Availability
Recombinant human Klotho protein is available from research-grade biochemical suppliers (R&D Systems, PeproTech, and similar companies) for use in laboratory experiments. These products are:
- Sold exclusively for research use — explicitly labeled "not for human use"
- Produced under research-grade manufacturing standards (not cGMP)
- Available in microgram quantities at research pricing (typically $200–$500 for 10–50 µg)
- Not tested for pyrogens, sterility, or other safety parameters required for human administration
- Used by academic and pharmaceutical laboratories for in vitro and animal studies
Companies and Institutions in the Klotho Space
Several organizations are conducting preclinical Klotho research with therapeutic intent, though none have entered human trials:
- Unity Biotechnology: Has explored Klotho-related approaches as part of its longevity and senescence research portfolio
- Academic laboratories: Multiple university research groups (notably at UCSF, Yale, and others) are investigating Klotho biology with translational goals
- Biotech startups: Several early-stage companies have incorporated Klotho into their longevity or kidney disease pipelines, though most are pre-IND stage
Path to Human Trials
For Klotho to become a therapy, it would need to follow the standard drug development pathway:
- Preclinical development: Manufacturing optimization, GLP toxicology studies, pharmacokinetic profiling, formulation development (current stage)
- IND filing: Submission of preclinical data package to the FDA to request permission for human trials
- Phase 1: First-in-human safety and dose-finding study
- Phase 2: Efficacy signals in specific patient populations
- Phase 3: Pivotal efficacy and safety trials
- BLA/NDA filing: Application for marketing approval
This process typically takes 10–15 years from IND to approval. Since Klotho has not yet reached the IND stage, any approved Klotho therapy is likely many years away.
Further Reading
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider.
Cost
Research-Grade Klotho Pricing
For context, recombinant human Klotho protein from laboratory suppliers is priced as follows:
| Supplier Type | Typical Quantity | Typical Price | Intended Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Major biochemical suppliers (R&D Systems, PeproTech) | 10–50 µg | $200–$500 | Cell culture, in vitro assays |
| Bulk research orders | 100–500 µg | $1,000–$5,000 | Animal studies |
| Custom/GMP-grade production | Milligram scale | $10,000–$100,000+ | Preclinical development |
To put this in perspective: the dose used to enhance cognition in mice (Dubal et al., 2014) was 10 µg/kg. For a 70 kg human, a theoretical equivalent dose would require approximately 700 µg per injection — costing $7,000–$35,000 per dose at current research pricing, before any manufacturing, purification, or clinical-grade preparation costs. This underscores why Klotho therapy is not currently feasible as a commercial product.
Cost of Endogenous Klotho Support Strategies
| Strategy | Approximate Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Regular exercise | Free – $50/month (gym) | Aerobic and resistance training associated with higher Klotho |
| Vitamin D supplementation | $5–$15/month | Correcting deficiency may support Klotho expression |
| Vitamin D blood test | $30–$75 | 25-OH vitamin D; widely available |
| Soluble Klotho blood test | $100–$300 | Specialty labs only; not standard clinical test |
| Blood pressure management | Varies (with insurance) | ACE inhibitors/ARBs may support Klotho levels |
| Kidney function monitoring | $20–$50 (basic metabolic panel) | Standard clinical lab; kidney health is the primary driver of Klotho maintenance |
Insurance Coverage
There is nothing Klotho-specific to cover. However:
- Vitamin D testing and supplementation: Often covered by insurance when medically indicated
- Kidney function monitoring (BMP, CMP): Standard clinical labs, typically covered
- Blood pressure medications: ACE inhibitors and ARBs are generic and widely covered
- Soluble Klotho testing: Not covered by any standard insurance plan; considered experimental/research
Cost Comparison: Klotho vs. Other Longevity Interventions
| Intervention | Monthly Cost | Availability |
|---|---|---|
| Klotho therapy (exogenous) | Not available | Does not exist |
| Endogenous Klotho support (lifestyle) | $0–$50 | Available now |
| NMN/NR (NAD+ precursors) | $40–$150 | Supplement; no FDA approval for longevity |
| Rapamycin (off-label) | $50–$200 | Prescription; off-label for longevity |
| Metformin (off-label) | $4–$20 | Prescription; TAME trial in progress |
| Senolytics (D+Q) | $30–$100 (intermittent) | Off-label; early clinical trials |
Further Reading
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider.
Questions & Answers
Q: Can I buy Klotho supplements online?
Answer: No legitimate Klotho supplement exists. Any product marketed as "Klotho supplement," "Klotho peptide," or "Klotho activator" is not an established, validated product. Klotho is a large protein (~130 kDa) that cannot be delivered orally (it would be digested in the stomach), and no injectable Klotho formulation has been developed for human use. Products marketed with these claims should be viewed with significant skepticism and may contain unknown or unverified substances.
Q: Is Klotho the same as an anti-aging peptide like BPC-157 or GHK-Cu?
Answer: No. Klotho is fundamentally different from small peptides used in anti-aging medicine. BPC-157 (~1.5 kDa) and GHK-Cu (~400 Da) are small, relatively simple molecules that are commercially synthesized and available (though not FDA-approved for most uses). Klotho is a large, complex glycoprotein (~130 kDa) — roughly 100 times the size of BPC-157 — requiring mammalian cell culture for production, and it is not available as a therapeutic. The biological mechanisms are also entirely different: Klotho operates through FGF23 co-reception, Wnt signaling inhibition, and insulin/IGF-1 modulation, while peptides like BPC-157 work through different pathways (Xu & Sun, 2015).
Q: If Klotho declines with age, can I just take more vitamin D to raise it?
Answer: Vitamin D does support Klotho expression through vitamin D receptor (VDR)-mediated transcription of the Klotho gene. Correcting a vitamin D deficiency can help restore suppressed Klotho levels. However, vitamin D supplementation in people who are already vitamin D-sufficient is unlikely to produce significant additional Klotho elevation. The age-related decline in Klotho is driven by multiple factors (epigenetic silencing, kidney aging, chronic inflammation) that vitamin D alone cannot fully address. That said, ensuring adequate vitamin D status is a reasonable and low-risk strategy for supporting Klotho biology.
Q: Will exercise really increase my Klotho levels?
Answer: Multiple observational studies have found that physically active individuals have higher circulating Klotho levels than sedentary individuals, and animal studies confirm that exercise upregulates Klotho gene expression in the kidney. The effect appears to be mediated through reduced systemic inflammation, improved kidney perfusion, and direct transcriptional effects. While the magnitude of exercise-induced Klotho increase is modest (likely 10–20% higher, not the 2–3x levels seen in transgenic mice), it is one of the most accessible and evidence-supported strategies for maintaining Klotho levels.
Q: I have chronic kidney disease. Is my Klotho low?
Answer: Almost certainly, yes. CKD is the strongest known driver of Klotho decline. Klotho levels begin to fall in very early CKD (stages 1–2), often before significant changes in GFR or creatinine. By advanced CKD (stages 4–5), Klotho levels can be reduced by 50–80% or more. This Klotho deficiency is believed to contribute to the accelerated cardiovascular aging, vascular calcification, and bone disease seen in CKD patients. Some researchers consider CKD a "state of Klotho deficiency" and view Klotho replacement as a therapeutic target for this population — though no such therapy is yet available (Hu et al., 2011).
Q: How far away is Klotho therapy from being available?
Answer: Realistically, Klotho therapy is likely at least 5–10 years away from any human availability, and potentially longer. As of 2026, no exogenous Klotho product has entered human clinical trials. The challenges are substantial: manufacturing a large, complex glycoprotein at scale, achieving adequate tissue distribution (especially to the brain), establishing dosing and safety parameters, and navigating the full IND-to-approval regulatory pathway. The science is compelling, but translation from mouse studies to human medicine is a long and uncertain process.
Q: Is the aging phenotype in Klotho-knockout mice really "aging" or just phosphate toxicity?
Answer: This is an active scientific debate. The severe hyperphosphatemia and vitamin D excess in Klotho-deficient mice contribute significantly to their phenotype — particularly the vascular calcification and soft tissue damage. When Klotho-deficient mice are placed on a low-phosphate diet or crossed with vitamin D-deficient strains, many features of their "aging" phenotype are rescued. This suggests that at least part of the syndrome is driven by mineral metabolism derangement rather than intrinsic aging. However, soluble Klotho has independent anti-aging effects (anti-oxidant, anti-inflammatory, Wnt inhibition) beyond its mineral metabolism role, and Klotho overexpression extends lifespan even in mice with normal phosphate levels (Kurosu et al., 2005). The truth likely involves both mechanisms.
Further Reading
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider.
Key Takeaways
Based on the available evidence:
- Klotho is one of the most important proteins in aging biology. Discovered in 1997, it is named after the Greek goddess who spins the thread of life. Mice without Klotho age rapidly and die young; mice with extra Klotho live 20–30% longer. In humans, higher Klotho levels are associated with longer lifespan, better cognition, and lower cardiovascular risk.
- Klotho operates through two mechanisms: as a membrane-bound co-receptor for FGF23 (regulating phosphate, vitamin D, and calcium) and as a circulating soluble hormone with anti-oxidant, anti-inflammatory, anti-fibrotic, and Wnt-inhibiting properties.
- The cognitive findings are especially compelling. A single injection of Klotho protein enhanced learning and memory in both young and old mice (Dubal et al., 2014), raising the possibility of future cognitive therapeutics — though this has not been tested in humans.
- Klotho levels decline significantly with age, starting in the 30s, and this decline is dramatically accelerated by chronic kidney disease, chronic inflammation, and oxidative stress.
- No Klotho therapy is available. No exogenous Klotho product (recombinant protein, gene therapy, or small molecule activator) has entered human clinical trials as of 2026. This is a purely preclinical field. Any product sold online as "Klotho" is not a validated therapeutic.
- Lifestyle strategies can support endogenous Klotho: regular exercise, adequate vitamin D, kidney health preservation, blood pressure control, and reducing chronic inflammation are the most evidence-supported approaches available today.
- The therapeutic hurdles are substantial: Klotho is a large, complex glycoprotein (~130 kDa) that is expensive to produce, difficult to deliver (especially to the brain), and requires the full drug development pathway before human use. Realistic timelines for availability are at least 5–10 years.
- This is a "watch this space" story. The biology is extraordinary. The mouse data is some of the most striking in aging research. But the therapy does not yet exist, and translation from mice to humans is never guaranteed.
Questions to Ask a Provider
- Should I have my vitamin D levels checked, and could a deficiency be contributing to accelerated aging?
- Is my kidney function being adequately monitored, given Klotho's dependence on renal health?
- Are there medications I'm taking that might affect Klotho levels (ACE inhibitors, ARBs, PPAR-γ agonists)?
- Would a soluble Klotho blood test be informative in my clinical context?
- What exercise program would best support longevity-associated biomarkers like Klotho?
- Are there clinical trials investigating Klotho that I might be eligible for in the future?
- How should I interpret online claims about "Klotho supplements" or "Klotho-boosting" products?
This content is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended as, and should not be interpreted as, medical advice. The information provided does not cover all possible uses, precautions, interactions, or adverse effects, and may not reflect the most recent medical research or guidelines. It should not be used as a substitute for the advice of a qualified healthcare professional. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking treatment because of something you have read here. Always speak with your doctor or pharmacist before starting, stopping, or changing any prescribed medication or treatment. If you think you may have a medical emergency, call your doctor or emergency services immediately. GLPbase does not recommend or endorse any specific tests, physicians, products, procedures, or opinions. Use of this information is at your own risk.
Sources & Further Reading
Foundational Discovery & Aging Biology
- Kuro-o M, Matsumura Y, Aizawa H, et al. (1997) — "Mutation of the mouse klotho gene leads to a syndrome resembling ageing" — Nature, 390(6655):45-51
- Kurosu H, Yamamoto M, Clark JD, et al. (2005) — "Suppression of aging in mice by the hormone Klotho" — Science, 309(5742):1829-1833
- Xu Y, Sun Z (2015) — "Molecular basis of Klotho: from gene to function in aging" — Current Opinion in Nephrology and Hypertension, 24(2):93-99
Soluble Klotho Biology
- Yamazaki Y, Imura A, Urakawa I, et al. (2010) — "Establishment of sandwich ELISA for soluble alpha-Klotho measurement" — Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 398(3):513-518
- Drew DA, Kuro-o M, Bhatt DL, et al. (2022) — "Klotho and the aging process" — Review article
Cognitive Enhancement
- Dubal DB, Yokoyama JS, Zhu L, et al. (2014) — "Life extension factor klotho enhances cognition" — Cell Reports, 7(4):1065-1076
- Vo HT, Laszczyk AM, King GD (2018) — "Klotho, the key to healthy brain aging?" — Brain Plasticity, 3(2):183-194
Human Genetics & Longevity
Kidney Disease
Cardiovascular Disease
Cancer Biology
Reviews & Comprehensive Analyses
- Drew DA, Kuro-o M, Bhatt DL (2022) — "Klotho and the aging process — comprehensive review of Klotho biology, clinical associations, and therapeutic potential"
- Xu Y, Sun Z (2015) — "Molecular basis of Klotho: from gene to function in aging" — Current Opinion in Nephrology and Hypertension
- Vo HT, Laszczyk AM, King GD (2018) — "Klotho, the key to healthy brain aging?" — Brain Plasticity
Regulatory & Development Resources
- FDA: Investigational New Drug (IND) Application Process
- ClinicalTrials.gov: Active and completed studies mentioning Klotho
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider.