Quercetin & Senolytics: The Complete Guide

⚠ Important Safety Notice

Dasatinib is a prescription chemotherapy medication used to treat certain leukemias (CML and Ph+ ALL). It is NOT approved for anti-aging use and should ONLY be used under direct oncologist supervision. GLPbase does not provide dosing guidance for prescription cancer medications. Consult your healthcare provider.

Key Facts

Class: Senolytic research area
Key compounds: Quercetin (flavonoid) + Dasatinib (tyrosine kinase inhibitor)
Target: Senescent cell clearance
Research stage: Early clinical trials (no Phase 3 completed)
Quercetin availability: Over-the-counter dietary supplement
Dasatinib availability: Prescription oncology drug (FDA-approved for CML only)
Estimated cost (quercetin): $15–$40/month OTC
FDA status: Not approved as a senolytic combination

Overview

At a Glance

Quercetin is a plant-derived flavonoid found in onions, apples, and berries. It is widely available as an OTC supplement ($15–$40/month) with antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and mild senolytic properties. In research settings, quercetin has been studied alongside the prescription drug dasatinib as a senolytic combination — a therapy designed to selectively eliminate senescent ("zombie") cells that accumulate with age. Dasatinib is a prescription chemotherapy drug and is not covered in this guide's dosing section. Quercetin alone remains a popular supplement for general health support.

Cellular senescence is a state in which cells permanently stop dividing but resist normal programmed cell death (apoptosis). These senescent cells accumulate in tissues over time and secrete a cocktail of inflammatory molecules, proteases, and growth factors collectively termed the senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP). The SASP contributes to chronic inflammation, tissue dysfunction, and age-related disease (Zhu et al., 2015).

The concept of senolytics — drugs that selectively kill senescent cells — was first demonstrated in 2015 by researchers at Mayo Clinic. They screened compounds for the ability to target senescent cell anti-apoptotic pathways (SCAPs) and identified the combination of dasatinib plus quercetin (D+Q) as the first effective senolytic regimen (Zhu et al., 2015).

Dasatinib is an FDA-approved tyrosine kinase inhibitor used in the treatment of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) and Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Quercetin is a naturally occurring flavonoid with known antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and pro-apoptotic properties. Neither compound alone is sufficient as a broad senolytic — dasatinib is more effective against senescent preadipocytes, while quercetin targets senescent endothelial cells. Together, they cover a broader range of senescent cell types.

Quick Facts

PropertyQuercetinDasatinib
Chemical classFlavonoid (polyphenol)Tyrosine kinase inhibitor
Natural sourcesOnions, apples, berries, capers, green teaSynthetic pharmaceutical
Molecular weight302.24 Da488.01 Da
FDA approvedGRAS dietary ingredientYes — for CML and Ph+ ALL
Senolytic targetEndothelial cells, bone marrow stem cellsPreadipocytes (fat cell precursors)
AvailabilityOTC supplementPrescription only

This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider.

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