MikeDC, in one of the rare moments when he wasn't shilling for Chromadex, alerted me to the following study, and for that I am grateful.
https://www.ncbi.nlm...pubmed/28993191
"The anti-aging protein Klotho is induced by GABA therapy and exerts protective and stimulatory effects on pancreatic beta cells."
The gist of the study is that GABA increases Klotho in several mouse and tissue cultures, thus ameliorating both T1DM and T2DM. Plasma Klotho and a couple other tissues were seen to have Klotho levels that were returned to normal via GABA.
It's true that this study is not exactly directly translatable. But given how cheap GABA supplements are, and how expensive and obnoxious trying to obtain soluble Klotho is, this may work. I won't review the benefits of Klotho, suffice to say it is possibly the most promising anti-aging substance, with the only downside being that there is no efficient way to get it into your system regularly.
One of the benefits of this pathway might be that GABA shouldn't need to cross the BBB to increase Klotho. GABA does cross in small amounts, but given it's neurotransmitter status, it's probably good that it doesn't. Even for those of us that could use some GABA neur-upregulation, there would most likely be tolerance issues.
I really, really wish there was an easy (non-ELISA) way to measure serum Klotho levels. The more interventions I do, the more I'm seeing the necessity for accurate measurement. You are literally flying blind without it.