5-Amino-1MQ is an NNMT inhibitor (nicotinamide N-methyltransferase).
Unlock Fat Loss at the Metabolic Level.
5-Amino-1MQ isn’t a stimulant.
It doesn’t spike hormones.
It doesn’t rely on appetite suppression or CNS hype.
It works deeper — at the level where fat storage decisions are made.
5-Amino-1MQ inhibits an enzyme called NNMT (nicotinamide N-methyltransferase).
NNMT plays a role in:
Slowing metabolic rate
Promoting fat storage
Disrupting efficient energy use
When NNMT activity is high, your body becomes metabolically inefficient — calories are more likely to be stored as fat and less likely to be burned.
By inhibiting NNMT, 5-Amino-1MQ helps:
Increase metabolic efficiency
Improve insulin sensitivity
Shift the body toward fat utilization instead of fat storage
You’re not “burning fat harder.”
You’re making fat storage less attractive to the body.
That’s a key distinction.
Easier fat loss in a calorie deficit
Less rebound fat gain
Improved nutrient partitioning
Cleaner cuts without feeling wired
No jitters.
No crash.
No fake energy.
People cutting with stubborn fat
Lifters with insulin resistance tendencies
Athletes who diet correctly but stall
Anyone whose metabolism feels “sticky.”
This is especially relevant for:
Long-term surplus histories
High stress/cortisol profiles
Repeated bulk–cut cycles
5-Amino-1MQ is an NNMT inhibitor (nicotinamide N-methyltransferase).
Unlock Fat Loss at the Metabolic Level.
5-Amino-1MQ isn’t a stimulant.
It doesn’t spike hormones.
It doesn’t rely on appetite suppression or CNS hype.
It works deeper — at the level where fat storage decisions are made.
5-Amino-1MQ inhibits an enzyme called NNMT (nicotinamide N-methyltransferase).
NNMT plays a role in:
Slowing metabolic rate
Promoting fat storage
Disrupting efficient energy use
When NNMT activity is high, your body becomes metabolically inefficient — calories are more likely to be stored as fat and less likely to be burned.
By inhibiting NNMT, 5-Amino-1MQ helps:
Increase metabolic efficiency
Improve insulin sensitivity
Shift the body toward fat utilization instead of fat storage
You’re not “burning fat harder.”
You’re making fat storage less attractive to the body.
That’s a key distinction.
Easier fat loss in a calorie deficit
Less rebound fat gain
Improved nutrient partitioning
Cleaner cuts without feeling wired
No jitters.
No crash.
No fake energy.
People cutting with stubborn fat
Lifters with insulin resistance tendencies
Athletes who diet correctly but stall
Anyone whose metabolism feels “sticky.”
This is especially relevant for:
Long-term surplus histories
High stress/cortisol profiles
Repeated bulk–cut cycles